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Klebsiella pneumoniae Liver Abscess: CT Imaging Findings, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Radiology Pearls Every Clinician Should Know

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Introduction A 61-year-old man presented to the emergency department with severe low back pain that had persisted for one week. He had a high fever of 39.8°C and significant hyperglycemia. Emergency abdominal CT revealed a gas-forming lesion within the liver, ultimately diagnosed as a Klebsiella pneumoniae liver abscess. Blood cultures and abscess drainage cultures confirmed the pathogen. Following prompt antibiotic therapy and drainage, the patient recovered successfully. While pyogenic liver abscesses have historically been polymicrobial infections, a unique and increasingly recognized syndrome has emerged worldwide: Klebsiella pneumoniae primary liver abscess syndrome (KPLA) . This condition is particularly important because it can spread through the bloodstream and produce devastating metastatic infections involving the eye, brain, lungs, and other organs. Early recognition of medical imaging, especially CT scan diagnosis, can dramatically improve outcomes. For radiologists, emerge...

Gaucher's Disease: The Complete Radiology Guide to Diagnosis, CT Imaging, MRI Findings, and Modern Treatment

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A Rare Disease Hidden Within the Bone Marrow A 42-year-old man presents with chronic bone pain. His symptoms have gradually worsened over several years. Initial laboratory tests reveal mild anemia and thrombocytopenia. Conventional radiographs demonstrate unusual widening of the distal femur, while advanced imaging reveals extensive bone marrow abnormalities. What appears to be a common orthopedic complaint ultimately leads to the diagnosis of one of the world's most fascinating lysosomal storage disorders: Gaucher's disease. Although Gaucher's disease is considered a rare disease, radiologists, orthopedic surgeons, hematologists, and emergency physicians increasingly encounter its imaging manifestations. Modern enzyme replacement therapy has dramatically altered patient outcomes, making early diagnosis more important than ever. For medical imaging professionals, recognition of characteristic radiologic signs can be life-changing. What Is Gaucher's Disease? Gaucher'...

Pulmonary Embolism on Medical Imaging: The Critical CT and Radiology Signs Every Clinician Must Recognize

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  Introduction A 48-year-old man suddenly develops severe shortness of breath while at work. Within minutes, he experiences sharp chest pain that worsens with breathing. His oxygen saturation falls rapidly, and he is rushed to the emergency department. A chest radiograph reveals an unusual wedge-shaped opacity near the pleural surface. This classic finding, known as Hampton's Hump , immediately raises concern for one of the most dangerous emergency diagnoses in medicine: Pulmonary Embolism (PE). Pulmonary embolism remains a leading cause of preventable in-hospital death worldwide. Despite remarkable advances in medical imaging and CT scan diagnosis, PE continues to be underdiagnosed because symptoms often mimic many other cardiopulmonary diseases. This article provides a comprehensive review of pulmonary embolism, emphasizing modern radiology interpretation, CT imaging findings, emergency diagnosis workflows, and evidence-based treatment strategies. What Is Pulmonary Embolism? Pulm...

Schwannoma Mimicking Axillary Lymph Node Metastasis: A Comprehensive Radiology Guide to PET-CT, Ultrasound, MRI, and CT Diagnosis

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Schwannoma Mimicking Metastatic Lymphadenopathy: The Critical Imaging Clues Every Radiologist Must Know When a cancer patient undergoes PET-CT and an FDG-avid axillary mass is discovered, the immediate concern is usually metastatic lymph node involvement. In daily radiology practice, increased FDG uptake is often interpreted as evidence of malignancy. However, this assumption can occasionally lead clinicians down the wrong diagnostic path. A particularly educational case involved a 76-year-old man with a history of nasopharyngeal carcinoma who presented with dysphagia and severe pain. PET-CT revealed an FDG-avid axillary lesion with an SUVmax of approximately 4.5, strongly suggesting metastatic lymphadenopathy. Yet the final diagnosis was something entirely different: Schwannoma. This case highlights one of the most important lessons in modern medical imaging: FDG uptake does not equal cancer. Understanding the radiologic features of schwannoma across ultrasound, CT, MRI, and PET-CT is...

Neurocysticercosis on CT and MRI: The Hidden Parasitic Brain Disease Every Radiologist Should Recognize

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Neurocysticercosis: A Radiologic Diagnosis Hidden in Plain Sight Neurocysticercosis remains one of the most fascinating yet underrecognized infectious diseases encountered in modern medical imaging. Despite being the most common parasitic infection of the central nervous system worldwide, it is frequently overlooked in emergency diagnosis, especially in non-endemic countries. For radiologists, neurologists, emergency physicians, and clinicians involved in CT scan diagnosis or MRI interpretation, neurocysticercosis represents a critical differential diagnosis in patients presenting with seizures, chronic headaches, cognitive decline, or unexplained intracranial lesions. The disease can mimic tumors, metastases, encephalitis, tuberculosis, or autoimmune disorders. In many cases, imaging becomes the decisive factor that saves the patient from misdiagnosis and unnecessary surgery. This article explores the pathophysiology, epidemiology, imaging findings, differential diagnosis, treatment, ...