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Home » Conference Reports » ECR 2009

Diagnostic Imaging.
 

Today’s pulmonary infections pose multidimensional challenges for radiologists

By Philip Ward | March 10, 2009

Radiologists should be clinically focused when handling HIV cases, according to a leading chest expert. They must know if patients are drug-naïve or whether they are already on antiretroviral therapy. It is also important to determine how they acquired their HIV, whether onset is acute or more gradual, and how profoundly unwell the patients feel.

"If you have all this information, you are much more likely to make a more meaningful contribution to the management of the patient," said Dr. Simon Padley, consultant radiologist at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital and Royal Brompton Hospital in London.

Pulmonary infection is the commonest cause of infection-related death, and the sixth commonest cause of death overall. It is particularly important in HIV, he commented during Sunday's special focus session on the new face of pulmonary infections in Europe.

Chest x-rays remain the frontline imaging tool for HIV infection.

"We use CT in a much more limited and tailored way," he said. "Sometimes we use CT when the chest x-ray is being debated: Is it normal or isn't it normal? CT can be very useful for solving that argument."

CT is also used if there are complex or atypical features on a chest radiograph that are difficult to interpret. It is used increasingly for staging and restaging of neoplasms associated with HIV rather than for the assessment of infection. Occasionally CT is used for biopsy planning and biopsy guidance when there is a lesion that may be infected, Padley noted.

Two of the most important infections, pyogenic pneumonia and tuberculosis, occur above the point at which the patient is susceptible to opportunistic infections.

"How are these opportunistic infections acquired? The same way that you get that cold flying across the Atlantic. It's that person two rows behind you who sneezes and aerosolizes the pathogen, which you then inhale," he said. "It used to be that if you were an intravenous drug user, you may acquire your pulmonary infection via perhaps bacterial encodarditis or some other route, but aerosolized droplets are the most common cause of pathogen exposure."

His overall advice for HIV infection is to be aware of overlapping radiological appearances, remember noninfective causes, and put imaging in a clinical context. Microbiology is usually diagnostic, he said.

During the same session, Prof. Christian J. Herold, department of radiology at the University of Vienna, discussed community-acquired and nosocomial pneumonia.

"Imaging plays an important role in the detection, classification, and follow-up of patients with pneumonia," he said. "A solid knowledge of the radiographic features of pneumonia and a fundamental understanding of the epidemiologic, pathophysiologic, and clinical features of pulmonary infections are necessary. The chest x-ray is the primary imaging modality, but CT is increasingly used to detect pneumonia and evaluate complications." Pneumonia acquired in the community tends to occur in otherwise healthy persons, in individuals with co-existing diseases, or in nursing-home residents. The mode of infection is by person-to-person transmission of mucus droplets laden with viruses or bacteria.

Modifying factors that increase the risk of infection with specific pathogens include: age over 65 years, alcoholism, immune-suppressive illness, underlying cardiopulmonary disease, multiple medical comorbidities, structural lung disease (bronchiectasis), corticosteroid therapy (>10 mg prednisolon/day), and recent broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy.

 

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ECR 2009

Sponsored by an educational grant from Sectra

 

The European Congress of Radiology has emerged as a leading venue for sharing clinical and technological advances with European and international radiologists. This year reporting teams from Diagnostic Imaging’s European and North American editions will cover breaking developments from the plenary and scientific sessions, the exhibit floor, and other meeting exhibits and events. Watch for our coverage on the first day of the meeting, March 6, and continuing March 9-11.

--John C. Hayes
Editor, Diagnostic Imaging

 

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NewsfromECR2009


CT lung screening shows promise in ongoing trial
March 11, 2009

A CT-based lung cancer screening strategy that combines tumor morphology and tumor doubling times to evaluate cancer risk is producing good results, according to interim data from a Dutch-Belgian screening trial presented at the ECR.

Industry News Video: Sectra unveils experimental workstation
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ECR attendees glimpsed a workstation in the Sectra booth that could be the forerunner of a new way of handling and interpreting data from medical imaging scans. Greg Freiherr has the story from the exhibit floor of ECR 2009.

Interventional MR imaging represents worthwhile investment
March 10, 2009

If radiologists could design the perfect modality for guiding interventional procedures, the resulting technology would undoubtedly produce high-quality images without exposing patients to any ionizing radiation. So given the widespread availability of MRI, why are so many interventions still performed in the angiography suite?

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Coughing, shortness of breath, chest pain, chest tightness, and an abnormal breathing pattern are common indications of lung disease. The question is which one?

Industry News: Supersonic Imagine reinvigorates ultrasound R&D
March 10, 2009

It wasn’t too long ago that ultrasound was a roiling sea of innovation and new product releases, spurred by a rivalry among Diasonics, ATL, Hewlett-Packard (Agilent Technologies), and Acuson. Since these companies’ acquisition by GE, Philips, and Siemens, the waters have calmed. Supersonic Imagine plans to begin making some waves -- and soon.

Imaging checklist holds the key to hepatocellular carcinoma prediction
March 10, 2009

Mountaineering metaphors provided the framework for Sunday’s Josef Lissner honorary lecture: Ode to the liver.

Today’s pulmonary infections pose multidimensional challenges for radiologists
March 10, 2009

Radiologists should be clinically focused when handling HIV cases, according to a leading chest expert. They must know if patients are drug-naïve or whether they are already on antiretroviral therapy. It is also important to determine how they acquired their HIV, whether onset is acute or more gradual, and how profoundly unwell the patients feel.

New questions confront radiologists in molecular era
March 10, 2009

Crystal-ball gazing reached new levels at ECR on Saturday, when Prof. Dieter Enzmann took delegates on “a trip to radiology Tomorrowland,” as he referred to his W.C. Röntgen honorary lecture.

MRI and ultrasound reveal early signs of rheumatoid arthritis
March 10, 2009

Rheumatoid arthritis, which affects approximately 2.9 million people in Europe, can be difficult to differentiate from other forms of arthritis. Without an early diagnosis, however, it is impossible to assess the true effect of promising early intervention strategies. Could an alternative diagnostic imaging strategy be the answer?

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