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Clinical syndromes associated with ovarian neoplasms: a comprehensive review

Shanbhogue, Alampady Krishna Prasad; Shanbhogue, Divya Krishna Prasad; Prasad, Srinivasa R; Surabhi, Venkateswar R; Fasih, Najla; Menias, Christine O
Functional ovarian neoplasms have unique clinical manifestations related to hormone overproduction and may give rise to a broad spectrum of clinical syndromes. Sex cord-stromal tumors, the most common functional ovarian neoplasms, are associated with either hyperestrogenism (as in granulosa cell tumor and thecoma) or hyperandrogenism (as in Sertoli-Leydig cell tumor and Leydig cell tumor). Other, less common ovarian neoplasms that may have endocrine or nonendocrine syndromic manifestations include germ cell tumors associated with the excessive production of human chorionic gonadotropin (eg, choriocarcinoma, dysgerminoma), monodermal teratomas (eg, carcinoid tumor, struma ovarii) associated with carcinoid syndrome and hyperthyroidism, and primary epithelial ovarian cancers associated with paraneoplastic syndromes. The application of diagnostic algorithms based on patient demographic information, clinical manifestations, laboratory findings, and cross-sectional imaging features may help identify ovarian neoplasms in complex clinical settings.
PMID: 20631359
ISSN: 0271-5333
CID: 1500292

Gamut of focal fatty lesions in the liver: imaging manifestations with emphasis on magnetic resonance imaging

Fasih, Najla; Shanbhogue, Alampady Krishna Prasad; Thipphavong, Seng; Surabhi, Venkateswar R; Papadatos, Demetrios; Marginean, Celia
A wide variety of hepatic lesions contain fat within them in a proportion good enough to be demonstrable on imaging. With the biological behaviors quite different from each other, they form a clinico-radio-pathologic spectrum worth remembering. We present a review of common and uncommon focal hepatic lesions containing fat (micro- and macroscopic) within them and emphasize the role of imaging in their diagnosis.
PMID: 20510752
ISSN: 0363-0188
CID: 1500422

Current update on borderline ovarian neoplasms

Lalwani, Neeraj; Shanbhogue, Alampady K P; Vikram, Raghunandan; Nagar, Arpit; Jagirdar, Jaishree; Prasad, Srinivasa R
OBJECTIVE: Borderline ovarian tumors comprise a unique group of noninvasive ovarian neoplasms with characteristic histology and variable tumor biology that typically manifest as low-stage disease in younger women with resultant excellent prognosis. CONCLUSION: Borderline tumors are considered to be precursors of low-grade ovarian cancers. Accurate diagnosis and staging facilitate optimal patient management particularly in patients desiring to preserve fertility.
PMID: 20093592
ISSN: 0361-803x
CID: 1500302

An unusual case of polyorchidism with three homolateral testes and contralateral anorchia

Ojili, Vijayanadh; Shanbhogue, Alampady Krishna Prasad; Doherty, Geoffrey P
Polyorchidism is a rare urogenital developmental anomaly defined as the presence of more than two testes. Triorchidism is the most common type of polyorchidism and presents with two testes on one side (usually the left) and one testis on the other side. We report a rare case of polyorchidism with three homolateral testes on the right side and absent testis on the left side. Magnetic resonance imaging was used in the present case to investigate the cause for infertility and to confirm this rare diagnosis without surgical exploration
ORIGINAL:0009602
ISSN: n/a
CID: 1500582

Appendiceal diverticulitis in pregnancy

Shanbhogue, Alampady Krishna Prasad; Kielar, Ania; Nguyen, Bich; Shanbhogue, Divya Krishnaprasad; Teo, Iris
Acute appendicitis is the commonest nonobstetric cause of acute abdomen in pregnancy. Appendiceal diverticulitis, albeit very rare, warrants special attention owing to it's often insidious presentation and increased risk of perforation coupled with difficulty in diagnosing appendicitis in pregnancy. We describe a case of appendiceal diverticulitis in pregnancy diagnosed with ultrasound and MRI and review the imaging manifestations of this entity. To the best of our knowledge, this is the second case of appendiceal diverticulitis in pregnancy reported so far and the first report describing the MRI findings in appendiceal diverticulitis
ORIGINAL:0009603
ISSN: n/a
CID: 1500592

Real time spatial compound ultrasound in the evaluation of meniscal injuries: a comparison study with conventional ultrasound and MRI

Shanbhogue, Alampady Krishna Prasad; Sandhu, Manavjit Singh; Singh, Paramjeet; Ojili, Vijayanadh; Khandelwal, Niranjan; Sen, Ramesh
The aim of this study was to compare real time spatial compound ultrasound (RTCS) and conventional ultrasound with MRI in the evaluation of meniscal injuries. Thirty five patients with clinical suspicion of meniscal injury underwent ultrasound of knee alternating between conventional and compound sonography followed by MRI of the knee on a 1.5 T MR system. The images were compared for their quality and ability to detect meniscal tear. Compound ultrasound significantly improved definition of soft tissue planes, reduced speckle and other noise, improved contrast resolution (p value<0.05) with improved confidence in detection of tears in doubtful cases. Interobserver variability was seen only for conventional ultrasound and the sensitivity, specificity, accuracy were 83.3%, 87.5% and 85.7% for the first observer and 80%, 87.5% and 84.3% for second observer. For compound ultrasound it was same for both the observers with sensitivity, specificity and accuracy being 90% each. Although compound ultrasound improves image quality in the evaluation of meniscal injuries the benefit with respect to detection of tears is only marginal. It is a valuable tool for screening the patients before MRI and we recommend that instead of conventional ultrasound, compound ultrasound should be routinely used for sonographic evaluation of meniscal injuries.
PMID: 19059782
ISSN: 0968-0160
CID: 1500352

A clinical and radiologic review of uncommon types and causes of pancreatitis

Shanbhogue, Alampady Krishna Prasad; Fasih, Najla; Surabhi, Venkateswar R; Doherty, Geoffrey P; Shanbhogue, Divya Krishna Prasad; Sethi, Sumer K
Acute pancreatitis is one of the most common conditions for which emergent imaging is indicated. Alcohol consumption and cholelithiasis are the most common causes of acute pancreatitis in adults, whereas the majority of cases in children are idiopathic or secondary to trauma. A wide variety of structural and biochemical abnormalities may also cause pancreatitis. Although in some cases it is difficult to identify the specific cause of the disease radiologically, certain uncommon types of acute or chronic pancreatitis may have unique imaging features that can help the radiologist make an accurate diagnosis. These unusual types include autoimmune pancreatitis, groove pancreatitis, tropical pancreatitis, hereditary pancreatitis, and pancreatitis in ectopic or heterotopic pancreatic tissue. Pancreatitis may occasionally be seen in association with cystic fibrosis or pancreas divisum, or secondary to worm infestation of the pancreaticobiliary tree (eg, by Ascaris lumbricoides). In addition, primary pancreatic and duodenal masses may occasionally manifest as acute or recurrent acute pancreatitis. Knowledge of the classic imaging findings of these entities allows prompt recognition of the relevant pathologic condition, thereby preventing misdiagnosis and subsequent inappropriate or delayed management.
PMID: 19605653
ISSN: 0271-5333
CID: 1500382

Education and imaging. Hepatobiliary and pancreatic: herniation of the liver [Case Report]

Shanbhogue, A; Fasih, N
PMID: 19196404
ISSN: 0815-9319
CID: 1500482

Education and imaging. Gastrointestinal: gastrogastric intussusception [Case Report]

Shanbhogue, A; Walsh, C; Fasih, N
PMID: 19196403
ISSN: 0815-9319
CID: 1500492

Leiomyomas beyond the uterus: unusual locations, rare manifestations

Fasih, Najla; Prasad Shanbhogue, Alampady K; Macdonald, David B; Fraser-Hill, Margaret A; Papadatos, Demetrios; Kielar, Ania Z; Doherty, Geoffrey P; Walsh, Cynthia; McInnes, Matthew; Atri, Mostafa
Uterine leiomyomas affect 20%-30% of women older than 35 years. Extrauterine leiomyomas are rarer, and they present a greater diagnostic challenge: These histologically benign tumors, which originate from smooth muscle cells, usually arise in the genitourinary tract (in the vulva, ovaries, urethra, and urinary bladder) but may arise in nearly any anatomic site. In addition, unusual growth patterns may be seen, including benign metastasizing leiomyoma, disseminated peritoneal leiomyomatosis, intravenous leiomyomatosis, parasitic leiomyoma, and retroperitoneal growth. In the presence of such a pattern, a synchronous uterine leiomyoma or a previous hysterectomy for removal of a primary uterine tumor may be indicative of the diagnosis. However, some extrauterine leiomyomas may mimic malignancies, and serious diagnostic errors may result. The most useful modalities for detecting extrauterine leiomyomas are ultrasonography, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. The superb contrast resolution and multiplanar capabilities of MR imaging make it particularly valuable for characterizing these tumors, which usually show low signal intensity similar to that of smooth muscle on T2-weighted images. The radiologist's recognition of this and other characteristic features may help steer the clinician toward timely, appropriate management and away from unnecessary, potentially harmful treatment.
PMID: 19001649
ISSN: 0271-5333
CID: 1500522