Difference between revisions of "Ultrasonography of superficial soft tissues"

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File:Ultrasonography of a normal lymph node.jpg|thumb|A typical '''normal lymph node''': smooth, gently lobulated oval with a hypoechoic cortex measuring less than 3 mm in thickness with a central echogenic hilum.<ref name=Dialani2014>{{cite journal|last1=Dialani|first1=V.|last2=James|first2=D. F.|last3=Slanetz|first3=P. J.|title=A practical approach to imaging the axilla|journal=Insights into Imaging|volume=6|issue=2|year=2014|pages=217–229|issn=1869-4101|doi=10.1007/s13244-014-0367-8}} Creative Commons attribution license</ref>
 
File:Ultrasonography of a normal lymph node.jpg|thumb|A typical '''normal lymph node''': smooth, gently lobulated oval with a hypoechoic cortex measuring less than 3 mm in thickness with a central echogenic hilum.<ref name=Dialani2014>{{cite journal|last1=Dialani|first1=V.|last2=James|first2=D. F.|last3=Slanetz|first3=P. J.|title=A practical approach to imaging the axilla|journal=Insights into Imaging|volume=6|issue=2|year=2014|pages=217–229|issn=1869-4101|doi=10.1007/s13244-014-0367-8}} Creative Commons attribution license</ref>
File:Ultrasonography of a '''suspected malignant lymph node''', with Doppler.jpg|A suspected malignant lymph node:<br>- Absence of the fatty hilum<br>- Increased focal cortical thickness greater than 3 mm <br>- [[Doppler ultrasonography]] that shows hyperaemic blood flow in the hilum and central cortex and/or abnormal (non-hilar cortical) blood flow.<ref name=Dialani2014/>
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File:Ultrasonography of a suspected malignant lymph node, with Doppler.jpg|A '''suspected malignant lymph node''':<br>- Absence of the fatty hilum<br>- Increased focal cortical thickness greater than 3 mm <br>- [[Doppler ultrasonography]] that shows hyperaemic blood flow in the hilum and central cortex and/or abnormal (non-hilar cortical) blood flow.<ref name=Dialani2014/>
 
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Revision as of 12:57, 6 February 2019

Author: Mikael Häggström [notes 1]

Planning

Choice of modality

  • Ultrasonography of superficial soft tissues is the investigation of choice in stable superficial soft tissue masses of unknown origin, at least in flexion surfaces of large joints (groin, popliteal fossa, armpit and cubital fossa).
  • MRI is the imaging modality of choice in suspected lipoma, with superior sensitivity of distinguishing it from liposarcoma as well as mapping the surrounding anatomy.[1]

Evaluation

Possible findings:

Notes

  1. For a full list of contributors, see article history. Creators of images are attributed at the image description pages, seen by clicking on the images. See Radlines:Authorship for details.

References

  1. Rohit Sharma and A.Prof Frank Gaillard et al.. Lipoma. Radiopaedia. Retrieved on 2018-09-27.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Dialani, V.; James, D. F.; Slanetz, P. J. (2014). "A practical approach to imaging the axilla ". Insights into Imaging 6 (2): 217–229. doi:10.1007/s13244-014-0367-8. ISSN 1869-4101.  Creative Commons attribution license