Saturday, 5 November 2016

Case #1





History:

A 39-year-old female with history of chest pain.





























Findings:

There is a large left lung bullae occupying more than half of the lung.  







Diagnosis:

Vanishing lung syndrome




case #4






History:

A 18-month-old girl with chest wall mass, for evaluation.
















































Findings:


There is a left lateral chest wall subcutaneous lesion. The lesion is hyperintense on T1 and T2 and low signal in fat-sat sequence. No definite soft tissue enhancing component.






Diagnosis:

Lipoblastoma

case #3







History:



36 months old with right thigh swelling.















































Findings:



The x-ray shows swelling lateral to the right femur with no evidence of bone disruption, infiltration or lytic changes.



The MRI shows large well-defined lobulated soft tissue mass noted arising from the lateral femoral compartmental muscles. It shows a well-defined capsule and central necrosis. The lesion is isointense to muscle in T1 weighted images and high in T2 weighted images with heterogeneous enhancement.  The adjacent femoral vessels are compressed by the mass.






Diagnosis:


 Rhabdomyosarcoma



Case #2








Known case of prune belly syndrome and the image is shown just to see the appearance of the disease. 






Case #1







History :

No history was given 




























Findings:

A well-defined expansile bony lesion arising from the left transverse process of T7 vertebral body is noted extending posteriorly to the chest wall displacing the left erector spinae muscle posteriorly.






Diagnosis:

osteochondroma