- Photon-Counting CT in the Head and Neck: Current Applications and Future Prospects
This article reviews the current clinical application of PCD-CT in head and neck imaging, specifically the temporal bones, facial bones, and paranasal sinuses. PCD-CT offers improved spatial resolution, better iodine contrast-to-noise ratio, reduced artifact, and lower radiation dose.
- Perspectives from the Inaugural “Spinal CSF Leak: Bridging the Gap” Conference: A Convergence of Clinical and Patient Expertise
The “Spinal CSF Leak: Bridging the Gap” Conference highlighted collective insights from a diverse cohort of clinicians, researchers, and patients. This manuscript discusses the clinical, diagnostic, and treatment challenges of spinal CSF leak, concluding that a collaborative, multidisciplinary care team needs to provide a standardized-yet-flexible diagnostic protocol to address the variability in clinical presentations and often-subtle radiographic findings.
- The Differentiation between Progressive Disease and Treatment-Induced Effects with Perfusion-Weighted Arterial Spin-Labeling in High-Grade Gliomas
In this retrospective, single-center cohort study, 141 patients (173 lesions) with a new or increasing contrast-enhancing lesion after radiotherapy with or without chemotherapy were assessed with ASL perfusion. Although ASL performed poorly in differentiating progressive disease from treatment-induced effects in high-grade gliomas within 6 months after radiation therapy, it showed fair performance after this period.
- MR Imaging Features of Critical Spinal Demyelinating Lesions Associated with Progressive Motor Impairment
This retrospective, observational MRI study compared spinal cord critical demyelinating lesions anatomically associated with progressive motor impairment with any additional “noncritical” spinal cord demyelinating lesions. MRI characteristics that favored critical spinal cord demyelinating lesions included moderate-to-severe, focal, lesion-associated spinal cord atrophy; lateral column axial location; central region; ventral column; and larger lesion size. In particular, the presence of focal, lesion-associated atrophy, lateral column axial location, and larger lesion size may be associated with the development of progressive motor impairment in MS.