- MR Imaging Appearance of Ruptured Rathke Cleft Cyst and Associated Bone Marrow Enhancement
This clinical case series of 7 patients illustrates the imaging finding of enhancing basisphenoid bone marrow below the sella in cases of ruptured RCC. The mucin leaking out of the ruptured RCC can trigger a cascade of surrounding inflammation, which manifests as abnormal bone marrow enhancement.
- Prevalence of Cochlear-Facial and Other Non-Superior Semicircular Canal Third Window Dehiscence on High-Resolution Temporal Bone CT
This study of 500 patients found the prevalence of non-SSCD on high-resolution CT in asymptomatic individuals to be 1.6% for CFD and 8.0% for JVD as compared with the rate in patients with audiologic or vestibular symptoms (2.9% for CFD and 7.8% for JVD). There was no statistically significant difference in the rates of radiologic findings between patients with reported symptoms suggestive of a possible third window syndrome and those without auditory or vestibular symptoms.
- Dual-Layer Detector Head CT to Maintain Image Quality While Reducing the Radiation Dose in Pediatric Patients
Radiation exposure from CT scanning is of increasing concern as CT use in children has risen dramatically. This retrospective study of pediatric CT heads aimed to compare 60-keV with conventional images obtained with different acquisition protocols to evaluate whether a reduced radiation dose can be achieved in 60-keV without compromising image quality. On the basis of image analysis and observer agreement assessment, the authors found a dose reduction of 28% while maintaining superior image quality with a scan protocol of 180 mAs compared with 250 mAs on 60-keV virtual monoenergetic images from spectral detector CT in the pediatric head.
- Prospective, Longitudinal Study of Clinical Outcome and Morphometric Posterior Fossa Changes after Craniocervical Decompression for Symptomatic Chiari I Malformation
This prospective, longitudinal study of patients with Chiari I malformation posterior fossa dural opening and duraplasty quantified the change in the posterior fossa and upper cervical spine morphometrics and determined the change in symptomatology between at baseline and up to 5 years postsurgery. The authors found that symptomatic and MR imaging morphometric changes occurred within the first postoperative year.
- Differentiation between Chondrosarcoma and Synovial Chondromatosis of the Temporomandibular Joint Using CT and MR Imaging
As chondrosarcoma and synovial chondromatosis of the temporomandibular joint share overlapping clinical and histopathologic features, CT and MR imaging can be helpful to differentiate between the 2 entities. High-risk imaging features for chondrosarcoma include the following: lesion centered on the mandibular condyle, destruction of the mandibular condyle, no destruction/sclerosis of the articular eminence/glenoid fossa, infiltration into the tendon of the lateral pterygoid muscle, absent or stippled calcification, periosteal reaction, internal enhancement, and size of ≥30.5 mm.