Cardiac
GI
Bone
GU
Neuro
Peds
Faculty
Student
Quizzes
Image DDX
Mobile
  Misc
Videocasts
Twitter

 

 




LearningRadiology Imaging Signs
on Twitter

 

Case of the Week 372



What's the most likely diagnosis?

  • 47 year-old female with chronic cough



Frontal chest radiograph

1. Silicosis
2. Congestive heart failure
3. Alveolar sarcoid
4. Castelmann's Disease
5. Rickets


Additional Image - Axial CT image of the chest

 

Additional Image

.

Axial CT image of the chest


Answer:


3. Alveolar Sarcoid

.

.

More (Click Discussion Tab)


Alveolar Sarcoid


General Considerations

  • Least common manifestation of sarcoid in the lungs (2%)
  • Several large airspace “masses” frequently with air bronchograms
  • Occurs when granulomas become confluent and compress airspaces

    More ...


    .

    This Week

    47 year-old female with chronic cough
     
    Test your skills in differentiating between accurate and inaccurate conclusions based on your observations ("good calls" versus "pitfalls".) Learn how to avoid the pitfalls. There is a mini-quiz at the end.
     
    Review descriptions of key imaging signs in the shorthand of Tweets by subscribing to this new LearningRadiology Twitter feed for your computer or cell phone
     
    Key points on recognizing the most common fractures and dislocations
     
    Basic CT imaging of the brain focusing on the findings of cerebrovascular accidents
     
    The top diagnostic imaging diagnoses that all medical students should recognize according to the Alliance of Medical Student Educators in Radiology
     
    Recognizing normal and  key abnormal intestinal gas patterns, free air and abdominal calcifications
     
    Some of the fundamentals of interpreting chest images
    LearningRadiology.com
    is an award-winning educational website aimed primarily at medical students and radiology residents-in-training, containing  lectures, handouts, images, Cases of the Week, archives of cases, quizzes, flashcards of differential diagnoses and “most commons” lists, primarily in the areas of chest, GI, GU cardiac, bone and neuroradiology.