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PE MIMICS: a structured approach for the emergency radiologist in the evaluation of chest pain

Dempsey, P J; Yates, A; Power, J W; Murphy, M C; Ko, J P; Hutchinson, B
Chest pain is a common reason for presentation to the emergency department. In many cases, a CTPA or CT thoracic aorta is performed during work up to assess for pulmonary embolism and aortic pathology, critical diagnoses that can be difficult to out rule clinically. However, the causes of chest pain are myriad. It is therefore crucial for the interpreting radiologist to be cognizant of other potential etiologies when interpreting these studies. The purpose of this pictorial essay is to highlight the causes of non-PE or aortic-related chest pain and provide radiologists with a structured approach to interpreting these studies, ensuring a comprehensive search strategy so that important pathologies are not missed.
PMID: 35102473
ISSN: 1438-1435
CID: 5153452

Imaging Course of Lung Transplantation: From Patient Selection to Postoperative Complications

Kim, Stacy J; Azour, Lea; Hutchinson, Barry D; Shirsat, Hemlata; Zhou, Fang; Narula, Navneet; Moreira, Andre L; Angel, Luis; Ko, Jane P; Moore, William H
Lung transplant is increasingly performed for the treatment of end-stage lung disease. As the number of lung transplants and transplant centers continues to rise, radiologists will more frequently participate in the care of patients undergoing lung transplant, both before and after transplant. Potential donors and recipients undergo chest radiography and CT as part of their pretransplant assessment to evaluate for contraindications to transplant and to aid in surgical planning. After transplant, recipients undergo imaging during the postoperative hospitalization and also in the long-term outpatient setting. Radiologists encounter a wide variety of conditions leading to end-stage lung disease and a myriad of posttransplant complications, some of which are unique to lung transplantation. Familiarity with these pathologic conditions, including their imaging findings and their temporal relationship to the transplant, is crucial to accurate radiologic interpretation. Knowledge of the surgical techniques and expected postoperative appearance prevents confusing normal posttransplant imaging findings with complications. A basic understanding of the indications, contraindications, and surgical considerations of lung transplant aids in imaging interpretation and protocoling and also facilitates communication between radiologists and transplant physicians. Despite medical and surgical advances over the past several decades, lung transplant recipients currently have an average posttransplant life expectancy of only 6.7 years. As members of the transplant team, radiologists can help maximize patient survival and hopefully increase posttransplant life expectancy and quality of life in the coming decades. ©RSNA, 2021 An invited commentary by Bierhals is available online. Online supplemental material is available for this article.
PMID: 34197245
ISSN: 1527-1323
CID: 4926882

Chest CT Angiography for Acute Aortic Pathologic Conditions: Pearls and Pitfalls

Ko, Jane P; Goldstein, Jonathan M; Latson, Larry A; Azour, Lea; Gozansky, Elliott K; Moore, William; Patel, Smita; Hutchinson, Barry
Chest CT angiography (CTA) is essential in the diagnosis of acute aortic syndromes. Chest CTA quality can be optimized with attention to technical parameters pertaining to noncontrast imaging, timing of contrast-enhanced imaging, contrast material volume, kilovolt potential, tube-current modulation, and decisions regarding electrocardiographic-gating and ultra-fast imaging, which may affect the accurate diagnosis of acute aortic syndromes. An understanding of methods to apply to address suboptimal image quality is useful, as the accurate identification of acute aortic syndromes is essential for appropriate patient management. Acute aortic syndromes have high morbidity and mortality, particularly when involving the ascending aorta, and include classic aortic dissection, penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer, and acute intramural hematoma. An understanding of the pathogenesis and distinguishing imaging features of acute aortic syndromes and aortic rupture and some less common manifestations is helpful when interpreting imaging examinations. Related entities, such as ulcerated plaque, ulcerlike projections, and intramural blood pools, and mimics, such as vasculitis and aortic thrombus, are important to recognize; knowledge of these is important to avoid interpretive pitfalls. In addition, an awareness of postsurgical aortic changes can be useful when interpreting CTA examinations when patient history is incomplete. The authors review technical considerations when performing CTA, discuss acute aortic syndromes, and highlight diagnostic challenges encountered when interpreting aortic CTA examinations. ©RSNA, 2021.
PMID: 33646903
ISSN: 1527-1323
CID: 4801202

The urachus revisited: multimodal imaging of benign & malignant urachal pathology

Das, Jeeban Paul; Vargas, Hebert Alberto; Lee, Aoife; Hutchinson, Barry; O'Connor, Eabhann; Kok, Hong Kuan; Torreggiani, William; Murphy, Joe; Roche, Clare; Bruzzi, John; McCarthy, Peter
The urachus is a fibrous tube extending from the umbilicus to the anterosuperior bladder dome that usually obliterates at week 12 of gestation, becoming the median umbilical ligament. Urachal pathology occurs when there is incomplete obliteration of this channel during foetal development, resulting in the formation of a urachal cyst, patent urachus, urachal sinus or urachal diverticulum. Patients with persistent urachal remnants may be asymptomatic or present with lower abdominal or urinary tract symptoms and can develop complications. The purpose of this review is to describe imaging features of urachal remnant pathology and potential benign and malignant complications on ultrasound, CT, positron emission tomography CT and MRI.
PMID: 32045264
ISSN: 1748-880x
CID: 5452602

Spectrum of Lung Adenocarcinoma

Hutchinson, Barry D; Shroff, Girish S; Truong, Mylene T; Ko, Jane P
Lung cancer remains the most common cause of cancer death in the United States of America and worldwide despite continued advances in lung cancer screening as well as surgical, medical, and radiation oncological treatments. Adenocarcinoma is the most common histological subtype of primary lung cancer and has recently been reorganized into a spectrum ranging from preinvasive lesions to invasive adenocarcinoma. An understanding of the pathology, diagnosis, and management of the spectrum of lung adenocarcinoma is more important than ever, considering the central role of the radiologist. The aim of this review is to describe the subtypes of the lung adenocarcinoma spectrum in terms of histological and imaging features, their pattern of growth on imaging, management, staging, and evolving knowledge of tumor genetics.
PMID: 31200873
ISSN: 1558-5034
CID: 3930292

Spectrum of Subsolid Pulmonary Nodules and Overdiagnosis

Hutchinson, Barry D; Moreira, Andre L; Ko, Jane P
PMID: 28734396
ISSN: 1558-4658
CID: 2650492

Reply to "Overdiagnosis Versus Misdiagnosis of Pulmonary Embolism" [Letter]

Hutchinson, Barry Donald; Bruzzi, John F; Navin, Patrick
PMID: 27003060
ISSN: 1546-3141
CID: 2208962

Overdiagnosis of Pulmonary Embolism by Pulmonary CT Angiography

Hutchinson, Barry Donald; Navin, Patrick; Marom, Edith M; Truong, Mylene T; Bruzzi, John F
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the rate of overdiagnosis of pulmonary embolism (PE) by pulmonary CT angiography (CTA) in a tertiary-care university hospital. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study is a retrospective review of all pulmonary CTA examinations performed in a tertiary-care university hospital over a 12-month period. Studies originally reported as positive for PE were retrospectively reinterpreted by three subspecialty chest radiologists with more than 10 years' experience. A pulmonary CTA was considered negative for PE when all three chest radiologists were in agreement that the pulmonary CTA study was negative for PE. The location and potential causes for PE overdiagnosis were recorded. RESULTS: A total of 937 pulmonary CTA studies were performed over the study period. PE was diagnosed in the initial report in 174 of these cases (18.6%). There was discordance between the chest radiologists and the original radiologist in 45 of 174 (25.9%) cases. Discordance occurred more often where the original reported PE was solitary (46.2% of reported solitary PEs were considered negative on retrospective review) and located in a segmental or subsegmental pulmonary artery (26.8% of segmental and 59.4% of subsegmental PE diagnoses were considered negative on retrospective review). The most common cause of diagnostic difficulty was breathing motion artifact, followed by beam-hardening artifact. CONCLUSION: In routine clinical practice, PEs diagnosed by pulmonary CTA are frequently overdiagnosed, when compared with the consensus opinion of a panel of expert chest radiologists. Improvements in the quality of pulmonary CTA examination and increased familiarity with potential diagnostic pitfalls in pulmonary CTA are recommended to minimize misdiagnosis of PE.
PMID: 26204274
ISSN: 1546-3141
CID: 2208952

Renal sympathetic denervation: MDCT evaluation of the renal arteries

Hutchinson, Barry D; Keane, David; Dodd, Jonathan D
OBJECTIVE: Percutaneous transluminal renal sympathetic denervation is a new treatment of refractory systemic hypertension. The purpose of this study was to assess the clinical utility of MDCT to evaluate the anatomic configuration of the renal arteries in the context of renal sympathetic denervation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Two readers retrospectively evaluated the MDCT renal artery scans of 90 patients (mean age, 70 +/- 13 years; range, 32-98 years). Analysis included the number of renal arteries on each side, ostial shape and size, angle off the aorta, branching pattern, degree of tortuosity, and distance to adjacent vascular structures. RESULTS: Sixty-five patients had one, 23 had two, and two had three renal arteries on one side. One hundred forty-six arteries were funnel-shaped (72 left and 74 right; mean ostial diameter, 0.9 +/- 0.2 cm tapering to 0.6 +/- 0.1 cm). The mean tortuosity index was 1.1 (range, 1 [no tortuosity] to 3.1). Compared with the left renal artery, the right renal artery was longer (4.0 +/- 0.9 cm vs 5.0 +/- 1.2 cm, p
PMID: 23883251
ISSN: 1546-3141
CID: 2208942

Paneth cell-like change in benign prostate ducts and acini post-radiation therapy represents neuroendocrine differentiation. [Meeting Abstract]

Gaudin, PB; Zelefsky, MJ; Hutchinson, B; Fuks, Z; Reuter, VE
ISI:000071793400491
ISSN: 0893-3952
CID: 5529782