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Prolactinoma: Advanced MRI & CT Imaging Diagnosis, Radiology Interpretation, and Modern Treatment Strategies

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  Prolactinoma: MRI Diagnosis, CT Imaging Features, Radiology Interpretation, and Modern Clinical Management Introduction A 33-year-old man arrives at the emergency department with progressively worsening headaches, left-sided weakness, and hearing impairment that has persisted for six months. Neurologic symptoms are becoming increasingly severe. Initial clinical suspicion includes intracranial malignancy, skull base tumor, meningioma, or aggressive inflammatory disease. However, advanced medical imaging using contrast-enhanced MRI reveals an unexpected diagnosis — a giant invasive prolactinoma. This clinical scenario highlights the importance of accurate radiology interpretation , especially in patients presenting with atypical neurological deficits. While prolactinomas are commonly associated with endocrine symptoms such as amenorrhea or galactorrhea, giant prolactinomas can mimic skull base malignancies and become critical emergency diagnosis challenges. In modern neuroradiolo...

Diabetic Ketoacidosis–Associated Hemichorea–Hemiballismus: Rare Imaging Findings, CT Diagnosis, and Radiology Interpretation in Emergency Neurology

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Diabetic Ketoacidosis–Associated Hemichorea–Hemiballismus: A Rare Emergency Radiology Diagnosis Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is traditionally recognized as a life-threatening endocrine emergency characterized by hyperglycemia, metabolic acidosis, dehydration, and electrolyte imbalance. However, in rare circumstances, DKA may trigger unusual neurologic complications that challenge even experienced clinicians and radiologists. One such rare imaging entity is hemichorea–hemiballismus (HCHB) occurring after DKA recovery. Although uncommon, this syndrome is increasingly recognized in emergency neuroradiology and medical imaging literature because early CT and MRI diagnosis can dramatically alter patient outcomes. The disorder is characterized by involuntary unilateral movements caused by dysfunction of the basal ganglia, often associated with metabolic derangements. Radiologists play a central role because imaging findings may be subtle, delayed, or mimic other devastating neurologic emerge...

Funnel Chest (Pectus Excavatum): The Hidden Chest Wall Deformity Every Radiologist Should Recognize

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Funnel Chest (Pectus Excavatum): Why This “Simple Chest Wall Deformity” Matters More Than You Think A 16-year-old boy arrives at a hospital for evaluation of a congenital chest wall deformity. He has no prior surgical history. No major systemic illness. Routine laboratory tests are normal. Yet on chest radiography, something unusual appears: The right heart border becomes obscured The cardiomediastinal silhouette shifts leftward Lateral imaging demonstrates marked posterior sternal depression Chest CT reveals a Haller Index greater than 3.25 The diagnosis? Pectus excavatum , also known as Funnel Chest or Sunken Chest . Although often dismissed as a cosmetic abnormality, modern medical imaging demonstrates that pectus excavatum can significantly affect cardiopulmonary physiology, exercise tolerance, psychological well-being, and emergency diagnosis pathways. Today, advanced CT scan diagnosis , radiology interpretation , and minimally invasive thoracic surgery are reshaping how clinicia...

Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma: The Hidden Threat in Medical Imaging — A Radiology Expert’s Guide to Early CT Scan Diagnosis and Emergency Detection

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  Introduction: A Silent Tumor Revealed by Imaging An 84-year-old former smoker presents for routine follow-up imaging. No pain. No hematuria. No clinical red flags. Yet, hidden within a non-contrast CT scan lies a subtle contour deformity—an early manifestation of clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) . This scenario reflects a growing reality in modern medical imaging : life-threatening diseases are increasingly detected incidentally. For clinicians and radiologists, mastering CT scan diagnosis , MRI interpretation , and radiology interpretation is no longer optional—it is essential. Figure-Based Case Review Figure 1. Axial Non-Contrast CT Radiologic Interpretation: A subtle exophytic soft tissue mass is observed along the anterior mid-to-lower pole of the left kidney. The lesion causes contour distortion without obvious calcification or macroscopic fat. Diagnostic Contribution: Initial detection of renal asymmetry—critical for early emergency diagnosis . Figure 2. Axial Non-C...

Acute Gangrenous and Emphysematous Cholecystitis: A Life-Threatening Emergency Diagnosis in Medical Imaging

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A 78-year-old woman arrives at the emergency department with progressively worsening right upper quadrant abdominal pain. Initial laboratory findings are nonspecific. Vital signs are mildly abnormal. The patient appears uncomfortable but not critically ill. A routine abdominal radiograph is obtained. At first glance, the image may appear deceptively subtle. Yet hidden within the gallbladder fossa is one of the most dangerous radiologic findings in emergency diagnosis: gas within the gallbladder wall . This is not ordinary acute cholecystitis. This is acute gangrenous/emphysematous cholecystitis , a rapidly progressive and potentially fatal subtype of gallbladder infection associated with ischemia, necrosis, perforation, septic shock, and mortality rates approaching 20–25%. For radiologists, emergency physicians, surgeons, and medical imaging professionals, rapid recognition is critical. Delayed diagnosis can lead to catastrophic outcomes within hours. In this article, we review the pat...