Posts

Pott Disease with Bilateral Psoas Abscesses: The Critical CT & MRI Findings Every Clinician Must Recognize Before Neurologic Damage Occurs

Image
Pott Disease with Bilateral Psoas Abscesses: A Rare but Life-Threatening Spinal Infection Diagnosed on CT Imaging Low back pain is one of the most common reasons patients visit clinics and emergency departments worldwide. Most cases are benign. Some are degenerative. Others are musculoskeletal. Yet occasionally, behind what initially appears to be an ordinary complaint lies a devastating and potentially disabling disease. One of the most dangerous examples is Pott's disease , also known as tuberculous spondylitis . In this featured case, a 31-year-old man presented not only with chronic back pain but also with an unusual abdominal wall mass. What initially could have been mistaken for a soft tissue tumor or nonspecific inflammatory lesion ultimately proved to be advanced spinal tuberculosis with bilateral psoas abscesses . The case highlights a crucial lesson in modern medical imaging : CT findings can reveal catastrophic spinal infection long before irreversible neurologic damage ...

Hydropneumothorax: A Critical Radiologic Emergency Every Clinician Must Recognize

Image
Hydropneumothorax: CT Imaging Findings, Emergency Diagnosis, and Radiologic Interpretation Hydropneumothorax is one of the most clinically important thoracic emergencies encountered in modern medical imaging . Although relatively uncommon compared with isolated pneumothorax or pleural effusion, the coexistence of both air and fluid inside the pleural cavity creates a potentially life-threatening condition that demands rapid recognition and immediate intervention. In emergency departments worldwide, delayed diagnosis of hydropneumothorax may result in respiratory failure, mediastinal shift, septic complications, or circulatory collapse. For radiologists and emergency physicians, accurate radiology interpretation is therefore critical. The condition is particularly important in patients undergoing repeated thoracentesis, trauma patients, individuals with tuberculosis, malignancy, necrotizing infection, or advanced liver disease associated with hepatic hydrothorax. Modern MRI, CT scan , ...

Calcified Splenic Cyst: A Rare but Important Diagnosis in Medical Imaging and Emergency Radiology

Image
Calcified Splenic Cyst: CT Imaging Findings, Differential Diagnosis, and Modern Radiology Interpretation A 47-year-old man presented with persistent left upper abdominal discomfort that had continued for nearly two months. His symptoms were vague. There was no fever, no acute abdominal emergency, and laboratory findings were largely unremarkable. However, one detail in the clinical history changed the entire diagnostic perspective: He had experienced a major motor vehicle accident nearly 20 years earlier. A simple abdominal radiograph demonstrated a large calcified lesion in the left upper quadrant. Subsequent CT imaging revealed a large, well-defined cystic splenic mass with dense wall calcification. This case represents a classic but relatively uncommon entity in abdominal radiology: Calcified Splenic Cyst . Although many splenic cysts are discovered incidentally during modern medical imaging examinations, large calcified cysts remain diagnostically important because they may mimic n...

Dural-Based Plasmacytoma Presenting as the Initial Sign of Multiple Myeloma: A Rare Skull Mass Every Radiologist Should Recognize

Image
Dural-Based Plasmacytoma Presenting as the Initial Sign of Multiple Myeloma A painless scalp lump may appear clinically insignificant. However, in rare circumstances, it may represent the first warning sign of an underlying systemic malignancy. In modern medical imaging practice, recognizing subtle radiologic clues can dramatically alter patient prognosis. This article explores a rare but clinically critical entity: dural-based plasmacytoma presenting as the initial manifestation of multiple myeloma . We review the pathophysiology, epidemiology, radiology interpretation, CT imaging findings, MRI characteristics, differential diagnosis, diagnostic workflow, treatment strategies, and prognosis using a real-world clinical scenario. For radiologists, emergency physicians, neurologists, oncologists, and medical imaging specialists, this case demonstrates how advanced radiology interpretation can identify systemic hematologic malignancy before catastrophic complications occur. Clinical Scena...

Meckel’s Diverticulum: The Hidden Congenital GI Disorder Every Radiologist Must Recognize Early

Image
Meckel’s Diverticulum: A Critical Radiology Diagnosis Hidden Behind Pediatric Abdominal Pain A 10-year-old boy arrives at the emergency department with progressively worsening periumbilical and epigastric pain after three weeks of intermittent abdominal discomfort. Initial clinical examination is inconclusive. However, abdominal CT reveals proximal small-bowel intussusception. Further gastrointestinal imaging suggests an underlying congenital anomaly. The final diagnosis: Meckel’s diverticulum . Although often asymptomatic, Meckel’s diverticulum remains one of the most important congenital gastrointestinal abnormalities encountered in emergency diagnosis and pediatric radiology interpretation. Failure to recognize its imaging characteristics may lead to bowel obstruction, hemorrhage, perforation, or delayed surgical management. For radiologists, emergency physicians, pediatric surgeons, and clinicians involved in MRI and CT scan diagnosis, understanding the subtle imaging features of M...