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  • Book
    Adam E. M. Eltorai, Charles H. Hyman, Terrance T. Healey, editors.
    Summary: The book is an on-the-spot reference for residents and medical students seeking diagnostic radiology fast facts. Its question-and-answer format makes it a perfect quick-reference for personal review and studying for board examinations and re-certification. Readers can read the text from cover to cover to gain a general foundation of knowledge that can be built upon through practice or can use choice chapters to review a specific subspecialty before starting a new rotation or joining a new service. With hundreds of high-yield questions and answer items, this resource addresses both general and subspecialty topics and provides accurate, on-the-spot answers. Sections are organized by subspecialty and body area, including chest, abdomen, and trauma, and chapters cover the anatomy, pathophysiology, differential diagnosis, hallmark signs, and image features of major diseases and conditions. Key example images and illustrations enhance the text throughout and provide an ideal, pocket-sized resource for residents and medical students. -- Provided by publisher.

    Contents:
    Introduction
    SECTION I: Imaging Modalities
    Radiography
    Computed Tomography
    Ultrasonography
    Magnetic Resonance Imaging
    Fluoroscopy
    Nuclear Medicine
    SECTION II: Chest
    Technical adequacy of chest radiograph
    The Normal Frontal Chest Radiograph
    Normal Pulmonary Vasculature
    The Normal Lateral Chest Radiograph
    Normal CT Anatomy of the Chest
    Normal CT Anatomy of the Lungs
    The Fissures
    Classifying Parenchymal Lung Disease
    Characteristics of Airspace Disease
    Some Causes of Airspace Disease
    Characteristics of Interstitial Lung Disease
    Some Causes of Interstitial Lung Disease
    Atelectasis of the Entire Lung
    Massive Pleural Effusion
    Pneumonia of an Entire Lung
    Post-pneumonectomy
    What is Atelectasis?
    Types of Atelectasis
    Patterns of Collapse in Lobar Atelectasis
    How Atelectasis Resolves
    Normal Anatomy and Physiology of the Pleural Space
    Modalities for Detecting Pleural Effusions
    ^Causes of Pleural Effusions
    Types of Pleural Effusions
    Side-Specificity of Pleural Effusions
    General Characteristics of Pneumonia
    Patterns of Pneumonia
    Lobar Pneumonia
    Segmental Pneumonia (Bronchopneumonia)
    Interstitial Pneumonia
    Round Pneumonia
    Cavitary Pneumonia
    Aspiration
    Localizing Pneumonia
    How Pneumonia Resolves
    Pneumothorax
    Pneumomediastinum
    Pneumopericardium
    Subcutaneous Emphysema
    Endotracheal and Tracheostomy Tubes
    Intravascular Catheters
    Cardiac Devices
    Pacemaker, AICD, IABP
    GI Tubes and Lines
    Nasogastric Tubes, Feeding Tubes
    Esophagus
    Mediastinal Masses
    Anterior Mediastinum
    Middle Mediastinal Masses
    Posterior Mediastinal Masses
    Solitary Nodule/Mass in the Lung
    Bronchogenic Carcinoma
    Metastatic Neoplasms in the Lung
    Pulmonary Thromboembolic Disease
    Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
    Blebs and Bullae, Cysts and Cavities
    Bronchiectasis
    Normal Cardiac CT Anatomy
    ^Uses of Cardiac CT
    Cardiac MRI
    Enlarged Cardiac Silhouette
    Pericardial Effusion
    Extra-cardiac Causes of Apparent Cardiac Enlargement
    Identifying Cardiac Enlargement on an AP Chest Radiograph
    Cardiomegaly on the Lateral Chest Radiograph
    Non-cardiogenic Pulmonary Edema
    General Considerations
    Non-cardiogenic Pulmonary Edema
    Imaging Findings
    Differentiating Cardiac from Non-cardiac Pulmonary Edema
    Hypertensive Cardiovascular Disease
    Mitral Stenosis
    Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension
    Aortic Stenosis
    Cardiomyopathy
    Aortic Aneurysms
    General Considerations
    Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm
    Thoracic Aortic Dissection
    Coronary Artery Disease
    SECTION III: Abdomen
    Conventional Radiography
    What to Look For
    Normal Bowel Gas Pattern
    Normal Fluid Levels
    Differentiating Large from Small Bowel
    Acute Abdominal Series: the Views and What They Show
    Calcifications
    Organomegaly
    Abdominal CT: General Considerations
    ^Abnormal Gas Patterns
    Laws of the Gut
    Functional Ileus: Localized Sentinel Loops
    Functional Ileus: Generalized Adynamic Ileus
    Mechanical Obstruction: Small Bowel Obstruction
    Mechanical Obstruction: Large Bowel Obstruction (LBO)
    Volvulus of the Colon
    Intestinal Pseudo-obstruction (Ogilvie Syndrome)
    Signs of Free Intraperitoneal Air
    Air Beneath the Diaphragm
    Visualization of Both Sides of the Bowel Wall
    Visualization of the Falciform Ligament
    Causes of Free Air
    Signs of Extra-peritoneal Air (Retroperitoneal Air)
    Causes of Extra-peritoneal Air
    Signs of Air in the Bowel Wall
    Causes and Significance of Air in the Bowel Wall
    Signs of Air in the Biliary System
    Causes of Air in the Biliary System
    Stomach and Duodenum
    Duodenal Ulcer
    Small and Large Bowel
    Large Bowel
    Pancreas
    Hepatobiliary Abnormalities
    Space-Occupying Lesions of the Liver
    Biliary System
    Urinary Tract
    Pelvis
    Urinary Bladder
    Adenopathy
    ^SECTION IV: Calcifications
    Patterns of Calcification
    Rim-like Calcification
    Linear or Track-like Calcification
    Lamellar or Laminar Calcification
    Cloudlike, Amorphous, or Popcorn Calcification
    Location of Calcification
    SECTION V: Trauma
    Chest Trauma
    Rib Fractures
    Pulmonary Contusions
    Pulmonary Lacerations (Hematoma or Traumatic Pneumatocele)
    Aortic Trauma
    Abdominal Trauma
    Pelvic Trauma
    SECTION VI: Musculoskeletal
    Abnormalities of Bone Density
    Normal Bone Anatomy
    The Effect of Bone Physiology on Bone Anatomy
    Generalized Increase in Bone Density
    Focal Increase in Bone Density
    Generalized Decrease in Bone Density
    Focal Decrease in Bone Density
    Pathologic Fractures
    Acute Fracture
    Dislocations and Subluxations
    How Fractures are Described
    by the Number of Fracture Fragments
    How Fractures are Described
    by the Direction of the Fracture Line
    ^How Fractures are Described
    by the Relationship of One Fracture Fragment to Another
    How Fractures are Described
    by the Relationship of the Fracture to the Atmosphere
    Avulsion Fractures
    Stress Fractures
    Common Fracture Eponyms
    Some Easily Missed Fractures or Dislocations
    Fracture Healing
    Anatomy of a Joint
    Classification of Arthritis
    Hypertrophic Arthritis
    Erosive Arthritis
    Infectious Arthritis
    SECTION VII: Neuro
    The Normal Spine
    Back Pain
    Malignancy Involving the Spine
    MRI in Metastatic Spine Disease
    Spinal Trauma
    Normal Brain Anatomy
    MRI and the Brain
    Head Trauma
    Intracranial Hemorrhage
    Diffuse Axonal Injury
    Increased Intracranial Pressure
    Stroke
    Ruptured Aneurysms
    Hydrocephalus
    Cerebral Atrophy
    Brain Tumors
    Other Diseases
    Neuroimaging Terminology
    SECTION VIII: Pediatrics
    Newborn Respiratory Distress
    Childhood Lung Disease
    Soft Tissues of the Neck
    Ingested Foreign Bodies
    ^Other Diseases
    SECTION IX: Ultrasonography and Magnetic Resonance Imaging
    How US Works
    Doppler Ultrasonography
    Adverse Effects or Safety Issues
    Medical Uses of Ultrasonography
    How Magnetic Resonance Imaging Works
    Hardware That Makes Up an MRI Scanner
    What Happens Once Scanning Begins
    How Can You Identify a T1-Weighted or T2-Weighted Image?
    MRI Contrast Agents: General Considerations
    MRI Safety Issues
    Diagnostic Applications of MRI .
    Digital Access Springer 2019