TOPICS
Sarcoidosis- CT findings
By Dr Deepu
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| conglomerated micronodules and centrilobular nodules in both lungs |
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| Enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes |
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| Bilateral hilar lymph nodes |
Chest CT scans show conglomerated micronodules
and centrilobular nodules in both lungs. We can see the enlarged mediastinal
and bilateral hilar lymph nodes.
Sarcoidosis is a multi-system disease of unknown
etiology, usually affecting the respiratory tract and other organs, and is
characterized by the formation of nonnecrotizing epithelioid granulomas. The
diagnosis depends on a combination of a typical clinicoradiological
presentation, the finding of nonnecrotizing epithelioid granulomas in a tissue
biopsy, and exclusion of other possible diseases, especially those of
infectious etiology.
Sarcoidosis results from an uncontrolled
cell-mediated immune reaction. Interactions between chemokines and receptors
that activate mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways play a major role in
inflammation and T-cell responses. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-[alpha] is an
important player in granuloma formation, and recent clinical trials have
investigated the efficacy of TNF-[alpha] inhibitors in sarcoidosis.
HRCT findings of Atypical Adenomatous Hyperplasia.
By Dr Deepu
Focal area of ground glass attenuation on Left Upper Lobe. Rest of the appearances are unremarkable.
Atypical Adenomatous Hyperplasia (AAH) of the human lung has been recently implicated as a possible precursor lesion of bronchioloalveolar carcinoma (BAC). The atypical adenomatous hyperplasia-adenocarcinoma sequence has been likened to the adenoma-carcinoma sequence in the large intestine. Atypical Adenomatous Hyperplasia is the earliest lesion in stepwise development of bronchioloalveolar carcinoma.By multivariate analysis, sphericity was statistically significantly associated with atypical adenomatous hyperplasia, and internal air bronchogram with bronchioloalveolar carcinoma
Read More: http://www.ajronline.org/doi/full/10.2214/AJR.07.3101
Focal area of ground glass attenuation on Left Upper Lobe. Rest of the appearances are unremarkable.
Atypical Adenomatous Hyperplasia (AAH) of the human lung has been recently implicated as a possible precursor lesion of bronchioloalveolar carcinoma (BAC). The atypical adenomatous hyperplasia-adenocarcinoma sequence has been likened to the adenoma-carcinoma sequence in the large intestine. Atypical Adenomatous Hyperplasia is the earliest lesion in stepwise development of bronchioloalveolar carcinoma.By multivariate analysis, sphericity was statistically significantly associated with atypical adenomatous hyperplasia, and internal air bronchogram with bronchioloalveolar carcinoma
Read More: http://www.ajronline.org/doi/full/10.2214/AJR.07.3101
RNTCP comes out with daily regimen for drug sensitive TB
By Dr Deepu
Download here
RNTCP India has come out with a new recommendation to use daily ATT in treatment of drug sensitive tuberculosis.
The Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme (RNTCP) was launched in India in 1997
based on World Health Organization endorsed Directly Observed Treatment Short-Course (DOTS)
strategy, employing the thrice weekly treatment regimen.
The Standards for TB Care in India, 2014, which were jointly laid down by Ministry of Health & Family Welfare, Government of India and World Health Organization, in consultation with experts, based on available evidences and WHO Treatment of TB Guidelines (2010), state that ‘all patients should be given daily regimen. The initial phase should consist of two months of
Isoniazid (H), Rifampicin (R), Pyrazinamide (Z), and Ethambutol (E). The continuation phase should consist of three drugs, Isoniazid (H), Rifampicin (R) and Ethambutol (E) given for at least
four months’. The National Technical Working Group (NTWG) on TB/HIV (2013) has recommended use of daily
regimen using Fixed Dose Combination (FDC) first line TB treatment for PLHIV patients.
Considering the above, the National Expert Committee to examine type of drug regimen for drug sensitive TB has recommended RNTCP to move towards introducing daily regimen for drug sensitive Tuberculosis in India.
The link to download the guidelines is given below. Please visit the link to download.
Download here
Classification of pneumothorax
By Dr Deepu
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| Cartoon showing mechanism of pneumothorax |
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| Chest radiograph- right sided pneumothorax |
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| chest radiograph- left sided pneumothorax |
Size Classification of Pneumothorax
(A) The American College of Chest Physicians
defines the size of a pneumothorax
by
the apex to cupola distance (≥3 cm large; <3 cm small).
(B) The British Thoracic Society defines the
size of a pneumothorax
by
the interpleural distance measured at the hilum (≥2 cm large; <2 cm small).
Study: Acetaminophen No Better Than Placebo In Fighting Flu Symptoms
By Dr Deepu
Study: Acetaminophen No Better
Than Placebo In Fighting Flu Symptoms .The New York Times (12/9, Bakalar)
reports “a randomized trial has found that” acetaminophen “is no more effective
than a placebo, with no discernible effect at all on reducing fever or other
flu symptoms.” The study was performed by researchers at Medical Research
Institute of New Zealand, and is published in Respirology.
It was a randomized,
double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of adults aged 18–65 years with
influenza-like illness and positive influenza rapid antigen test. Treatments
were given with 1 g paracetamol four times a day, or matching placebo, for 5
days. Pernasal swabs were taken for influenza quantitative RT-PCR at Baseline
and Days 1, 2 and 5. Temperature and symptom scores were recorded for 5–14 days
or time of resolution respectively. The primary outcome variable was area under
the curve (AUC) for quantitative PCR log10 viral load
from Baseline to Day 5.
They studied 80 participants were randomized: There were 22
and 24 participants who were influenza PCR-positive in placebo and in
paracetamol groups respectively. In all participants there were no differences
in symptom scores, temperature, time to resolution of illness and health
status, with no interaction between randomized treatment and whether influenza
was detected by PCR.they therefore concluded that the regular paracetamol had
no effect on viral shedding, temperature or clinical symptoms in patients with
PCR-confirmed influenza. There remains an insufficient evidence base for
paracetamol use in influenza infection.
Chest Challenge: chest x ray spotter
By Dr Deepu
This is a chest X ray of a 60 year old male. Presenting with history of alleged fall and right sided chest pain. His X rays are displayed here. The two X rays are 3 days apart. Observe the X rays and answer these questions.
1.What is your diagnosis?
2.The second X ray has worsened than the first one. What is the cause?
3. What can we expect in the CT thorax?
This is a chest X ray of a 60 year old male. Presenting with history of alleged fall and right sided chest pain. His X rays are displayed here. The two X rays are 3 days apart. Observe the X rays and answer these questions.
2.The second X ray has worsened than the first one. What is the cause?
3. What can we expect in the CT thorax?
Signs in chest radiology- The hilum overlay sign
By Dr Deepu
Most
of these masses usually are found to be in the anterior mediastinum.
The hilar overlay sign is another sign described
by Felson.The
hilum overlay sign refers to an appearance on frontal chest X ray of patients
with a mass at the level of the hilum which is in fact either anterior or
posterior to the hilum.
When
a mass arises from the hilum, the pulmonary vessels will be in contact with the
mass and hence their silhouette is obliterated. The ability to see and trace
the edges of the vessels through the mass implies that the mass is not
contacting the hilum, and is therefore either anterior or posterior to it.
want to read more in chest radiology??? Have a look at the following pages
Signs in chest radiology- The silhouette Sign
By Dr Deepu
Silhouette sign/loss of silhouette sign/ loss of
outline sign.
I was always confused with the silhouette sign for
its hidden meaning and failure to decode it by many medical students. So, I
thought it would be apt to unravel it so that it could be handy for many
medical students.
One of the most useful signs in chest radiology is
the silhouette sign. This sign was described by Dr. Ben Felson. The silhouette
sign is in nothing but elimination of
the silhouette or loss of lung/soft tissue interface caused by a mass or fluid
in the normally air filled lung. For instance, if an intrathoracic opacity is
in anatomic contact with, for example, the heart border, then the opacity will
obscure that border. The sign is commonly applied to the heart, aorta, chest
wall, and diaphragm. The location of this abnormality can help to determine the
location anatomically.
Just go through the X Ray to know the various structures seen in the chest x ray.
Let me explain this with this image.
What do we see???
There is plastic bottle which is surrounded by air,
the margins of the shadow is very well
demarcated from the surrounding air.
First scenario: There are two bottles, made of same
material, placed apart from each other. The shadows appears separate from each
other. Let us consider the right bottle to be the heart and the air surrounding
the bottle as lung. The left bottle as a mass, since they are far from each
other, the border of both is visible
clearly.
Second scenario: Here we see the bottles are
touching each other at two points and there is no gap in between and if we look
at the shadow, we cannot differentiate between the two shadows, they appear
like a single opacity at the upper and lower ends.
For the heart, the silhouette sign can be caused by
an opacity in the RML, lingula, anterior segment of the upper lobe, lower
aspect of the oblique fissure, anterior mediastinum, and anterior portion of
the pleural cavity.
This
contrasts with an opacity in the posterior pleural cavity, posterior
mediastinum, of lower lobes which cause an overlap and not an obliteration of
the heart border. Therefore both the presence and absence of this sign is
useful in the localization of pathology.
want to read more in chest radiology??? Have a look at the following pages
Chest Radiology
Signs in Chest Radiology
want to read more in chest radiology??? Have a look at the following pages
Chest Radiology
Signs in Chest Radiology
signs in chest radiology Bulging Fissure Sign
By Dr Deepu
Bulging
Fissure Sign
The
bulging fissure sign, it represents expansive lobar consolidation causing
fissural bulging or displacement by copious amounts of inflammatory exudate
within the affected parenchyma, seen in a chest x ray. It is classically associated with right upper
lobe consolidation due to Klebsiella pneumoniae , any form of pneumonia can
manifest the bulging fissure sign. The
prevalence of this sign is decreasing,because of prompt administration of
antibiotic therapy to patients with suspected pneumonia . The bulging fissure
sign is also less commonly detected in patients with hospital-acquired
Klebsiella pneumonia than in those with community-acquired Klebsiella infection
.
Other
diseases that manifest a bulging fissure
any space-occupying process in the lung, such
as
pulmonary
hemorrhage,
lung abscess, and
tumor
want to read more in chest radiology??? Have a look at the following pages
New ATS Guideline Site
By Dr Deepu
Click Here to Preview the ATS Pocket Guides
New ATS Guidelines.
The ATS has launched a one spot location for all its guidelines. Here you can find the latest ATS guidelines.Please use the guideline central to get all the guidelines.
Titles Include:
- Severe Asthma
- EIB
- Pulmonary Fibrosis
- Sleep Apnea
- PH of Sickle Cell
- Critical Care Series
- and Many More
Click Here to Preview the ATS Pocket Guides
WHO Calls On India To Increase Funding To Fight TB
By Dr Deepu
Reuters (11/19, Kalra) reports that the World Health Organization said that the global fight to end a tuberculosis epidemic by 2030 hinges on India increasing funding to control the disease. Reuters notes that the country accounts for over 20 percent of global TB cases.
Combating TB is a daunting task in India due to widespread insanitary conditions, poverty and a lack of public hospitals. Low public awareness and social stigma attached to the killer disease also hinder eradication efforts.
India also needs to upgrade laboratories to better detect the disease - the government last year tracked down 25,000 of the WHO's estimated 47,000 multi-drug resistant TB cases that, Raviglione said, was "not sufficient" but better than before.
TB killed 1.1 million people globally last year, for the first time rivaling HIV/AIDS as a leading cause of death from infectious diseases.
"If India doesn't invest on TB, then there will be very little progress at the global level," said Raviglione.
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