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Search Results (2,419)

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Keywords = radiologic evaluation

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18 pages, 1616 KB  
Article
Oncologic and Surgical Outcomes After Short-Course Neoadjuvant CAPOX Plus Bevacizumab in High-Risk Colorectal Liver Metastases
by Yawen Dong, Madita Tschoegl, Florian Lehner, Jonas Santol, Francesca Notte, Mariel Gramberger, Mohammed Salem, Edanur Cenan, Rebecca Thonhauser, Thomas Hoblaj, Rosemarie Valenta, Birgit Gruenberger and Thomas Gruenberger
Cancers 2026, 18(3), 521; https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers18030521 - 5 Feb 2026
Abstract
Background: The optimal duration of neoadjuvant therapy for high-risk colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) remains debated. While prolonged chemotherapy may enhance response, it also increases toxicity and risks delaying potentially curative resection. These considerations have raised the question whether a short-course neoadjuvant strategy might [...] Read more.
Background: The optimal duration of neoadjuvant therapy for high-risk colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) remains debated. While prolonged chemotherapy may enhance response, it also increases toxicity and risks delaying potentially curative resection. These considerations have raised the question whether a short-course neoadjuvant strategy might achieve sufficient oncologic selection and response while minimizing treatment-related morbidity. Methods: Patients with synchronous or metachronous CRLM who received two cycles of neoadjuvant CAPOX plus bevacizumab followed by curative-intent liver resection treated between 2014 and 2024 at Health Network Vienna, Austria, were included. Clinicopathologic characteristics, treatment tolerability, response assessments (biochemical, radiologic, and pathologic), and survival outcomes were collected and analyzed. Results: A total of 57 patients were included (65% synchronous, 35% metachronous), with the rectum being the most frequent primary tumor site (45.6%). Most liver lesions were <5 cm (84.2%), and 47% had bilobar disease. Minor hepatectomy was performed in 65% of cases, predominantly via open surgery (72%). Grade ≥3 treatment-related adverse events occurred in 6 patients (10.6%), mainly neutropenia and diarrhea. Biochemically, 53.7% achieved >50% tumor marker reduction. Radiologic assessment showed partial response in 31.6% and complete response in 1.7%. Pathologic evaluation revealed TRG 3 as the most common finding (57.1%), followed by TRG 2 in 22.5%. Subgroup analyses demonstrated significantly improved OS and RFS in patients receiving adjuvant therapy and in those with tumors < 5 cm. Conclusion: A two-cycle, short-course regimen of CAPOX plus bevacizumab proved both effective and safe in high-risk CRLM, achieving meaningful biochemical, radiologic, and pathologic responses with acceptable toxicity. This abbreviated approach allowed delivery of neoadjuvant therapy while limiting cumulative treatment-related toxicity, supporting its feasibility as a neoadjuvant strategy in selected high-risk CRLM patients. Full article
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18 pages, 3520 KB  
Article
Is Femoral Head Bone Marrow Edema of Unknown Etiology Associated with Acetabular Overcoverage? A CT-Based Three-Dimensional Study
by Veli Süha Öztürk, Tubanur Şanlı, Ali Balcı and Onur Hapa
Tomography 2026, 12(2), 19; https://doi.org/10.3390/tomography12020019 - 4 Feb 2026
Abstract
Background: This study aimed to investigate the association between femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) morphology and femoral head bone marrow edema of unknown etiology on hip magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and to assess the added value of computed tomography-based three-dimensional maximum intensity projection (CT-MIP) measurements [...] Read more.
Background: This study aimed to investigate the association between femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) morphology and femoral head bone marrow edema of unknown etiology on hip magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and to assess the added value of computed tomography-based three-dimensional maximum intensity projection (CT-MIP) measurements in identifying a predisposition to acetabular overcoverage. Methods: Hip MRI examinations performed between January 2007 and 2025 were retrospectively reviewed. Cases with bone marrow edema attributable to identifiable etiologies were excluded. Twenty-six patients with available hip or pelvis computed tomography (CT) examinations obtained within one year were included, along with an age- and sex-matched control group imaged for indications unrelated to hip pain. A total of 104 hip joints were evaluated. Alpha angles were measured on axial oblique CT reformations. Virtual pelvic radiographs generated from CT-based three-dimensional reconstructions were used for lateral center-edge angle (LCEA) measurements, and acetabular coverage was quantified using the acetabular coverage index derived from CT-MIP images. Appropriate statistical analyses were performed, with p < 0.05 considered statistically significant. Results: FAI was identified in 82.7% of cases with bone marrow edema of unknown etiology on MRI (p < 0.001), with pincer-type morphology being the most prevalent subtype (55.8%). Bone marrow edema was significantly more common in pincer-type FAI compared with other subtypes (p < 0.001) and predominantly involved the posterolateral femoral head. Mean alpha angle, LCEA, and acetabular coverage index values were significantly higher in the case group than in controls (p < 0.001). For the detection of pincer-type FAI, CT-MIP-based acetabular coverage index demonstrated superior diagnostic performance compared with LCEA (AUC, 0.917 vs. 0.855; p = 0.017), with an optimal cutoff value of 0.93 yielding high specificity and accuracy. All measurements showed excellent intraobserver and interobserver reliability. Conclusions: Femoral head bone marrow edema of unknown etiology may serve as a radiologic clue to underlying pincer-type FAI, while CT-MIP-based analyses may provide incremental value beyond conventional angular measurements in characterizing acetabular overcoverage. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Orthopaedic Radiology: Clinical Diagnosis and Application)
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9 pages, 2234 KB  
Case Report
Breast Metastasis from Pulmonary Mucoepidermoid Carcinoma in a Male Patient: A Case Report
by Raquel Diaz, Letizia Cuniolo, Rebecca Allievi, Ilaria Baldelli, Federica Murelli, Chiara Cornacchia, Francesca Depaoli, Cecilia Margarino, Chiara Boccardo, Marco Gipponi, Simonetta Franchelli, Marianna Pesce, Giovanni Rossi, Abdallah Saad, Umberto Meliga, Francesca Maria Scura, Santina Petroccelli, Gabriele Puglisi, Emanuela Barisione and Piero Fregatti
Curr. Oncol. 2026, 33(2), 94; https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol33020094 - 4 Feb 2026
Abstract
Mucoepidermoid carcinoma of the lung is a rare salivary gland-type tumor with heterogeneous clinical behavior and the potential to mimic neoplasms arising in other organs. The purpose of this report is to describe an exceptionally uncommon presentation of pulmonary mucoepidermoid carcinoma manifesting as [...] Read more.
Mucoepidermoid carcinoma of the lung is a rare salivary gland-type tumor with heterogeneous clinical behavior and the potential to mimic neoplasms arising in other organs. The purpose of this report is to describe an exceptionally uncommon presentation of pulmonary mucoepidermoid carcinoma manifesting as a breast metastasis in a male patient, a scenario that poses significant diagnostic challenges due to its rarity and its morphological resemblance to primary breast carcinoma. We evaluated the patient through clinical examination, cross-sectional imaging, endobronchial procedures, ultrasound-guided biopsy, immunohistochemistry, and molecular analysis, integrating these data to establish the diagnosis. Imaging revealed a primary lung mass and a second lesion in the left breast infiltrating the pectoralis muscle. Biopsy of the breast mass showed high-grade salivary gland-type mucoepidermoid carcinoma, clinically and radiologically suggestive of pulmonary origin. Because the lesion showed signs of impending ulceration, palliative surgical debulking was performed with good postoperative recovery. The patient subsequently began systemic therapy with gemcitabine. This case underscores the need for careful clinicopathologic correlation when evaluating atypical breast lesions and highlights the diagnostic value of molecular testing in distinguishing primary from metastatic salivary gland-type tumors. Recognizing such rare metastatic patterns is essential for appropriate therapeutic planning. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Breast Cancer)
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33 pages, 1455 KB  
Article
Systematic Analysis of Vision–Language Models for Medical Visual Question Answering
by Muhammad Haseeb Shah and Heriberto Cuayáhuitl
Multimodal Technol. Interact. 2026, 10(2), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/mti10020016 - 3 Feb 2026
Abstract
General-purpose vision–language models (VLMs) are increasingly applied to imaging tasks, yet their reliability on medical visual question answering (Med-VQA) remains unclear. We investigate how three state-of-the-art VLMs—ViLT, BLIP, and MiniCPM-V-2—perform on radiology-focused Med-VQA when evaluated in a modality-aware manner. Using SLAKE and OmniMedVQA-Mini, [...] Read more.
General-purpose vision–language models (VLMs) are increasingly applied to imaging tasks, yet their reliability on medical visual question answering (Med-VQA) remains unclear. We investigate how three state-of-the-art VLMs—ViLT, BLIP, and MiniCPM-V-2—perform on radiology-focused Med-VQA when evaluated in a modality-aware manner. Using SLAKE and OmniMedVQA-Mini, we construct harmonised subsets for computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and X-ray, standardising schema and answer processing. We first benchmark all models in a strict zero-shot setting, then perform supervised fine-tuning on modality-specific data splits, and finally add a post-hoc semantic option-selection layer that maps free-text predictions to multiple-choice answers. Zero-shot performance is modest (exact match ≈20% for ViLT/BLIP and 0% for MiniCPM-V-2), confirming that off-the-shelf deployment is inadequate. Fine-tuning substantially improves all models, with ViLT reaching ≈80% exact match and BLIP ≈50%, while MiniCPM-V-2 lags behind. When coupled with option selection, ViLT and BLIP achieve 90–93% exact match and F1 across all modalities, corresponding to 95–97% BERTScore-F1. Our novel results show that (i) modality-specific supervision is essential for Med-VQA, and (ii) post-hoc option selection can transform strong but imperfect generative predictions into highly reliable discrete decisions on harmonised radiology benchmarks. The latter is useful for medical VLMs that combine generative responses with option or sentence selection. Full article
14 pages, 1781 KB  
Article
Inner Ear Anatomy Variations in Acute Low-Tone Sensorineural Hearing Loss and Unilateral Stage I/II Ménière’s Disease: A Comparative Study
by Qin Liu, Xingqian Shen, Linlin Wang, Yangming Leng, Cen Chen, Ping Lei and Bo Liu
Diagnostics 2026, 16(3), 473; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics16030473 - 3 Feb 2026
Viewed by 48
Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the differences in inner ear anatomical variations between patients with acute low-tone sensorineural hearing loss (ALHL) and those with unilateral stage I/II Ménière’s disease (MD) based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Methods: A total of 30 patients with [...] Read more.
Objectives: To investigate the differences in inner ear anatomical variations between patients with acute low-tone sensorineural hearing loss (ALHL) and those with unilateral stage I/II Ménière’s disease (MD) based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Methods: A total of 30 patients with unilateral ALHL, 41 patients with unilateral stage I/II MD, and 59 healthy controls were enrolled retrospectively. 3.0T MRI was used to evaluate the distance between the vertical part of the posterior semicircular canal and the posterior fossa (PPD) and vestibular aqueduct (VA) visibility. Inter-group and intra-group comparisons and correlation analyses were performed to clarify the characteristics of anatomical variations. Results: (1) There were no significant differences in PPD and VA visibility between ALHL patients and healthy controls; the PPD of unaffected ears in MD patients was significantly shorter than that in healthy controls, while no significant difference was observed in the PPD of affected ears between MD patients and healthy controls. (2) The VA visibility of affected ears in ALHL patients was significantly higher than that in MD patients. (3) No significant intra-group differences in PPD and VA visibility between affected and unaffected ears were noted in ALHL or MD patients. (4) A significant negative correlation was found between the PPD of affected ears and pure tone average of affected ears in MD patients, while no correlations were observed between anatomical indices and clinical characteristics in ALHL patients. Conclusions: Although both ALHL and MD are categorized as hydropic ear diseases, radiological evidences demonstrate that MD patients exhibit inner ear anatomical variations, whereas no significant anatomical variations are observed in ALHL patients. This suggests that anatomical variations in the endolymphatic drainage system may be a predisposing factor for the pathogenesis of unilateral MD rather than for unilateral ALHL. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Clinical Diagnosis and Prognosis)
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19 pages, 4427 KB  
Review
Chest Discomfort: Could Coronary Pathology Extend Beyond Atherosclerosis?
by Ana Mladenovic Markovic, Ana Tomic, Miodrag Nisevic, Olga Nedeljkovic Arsenovic, Jelica Vukmirovic, Jelena Kostic, Aleksandar Filipovic, Ljiljana Bogdanovic and Vojislav Giga
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(3), 1185; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15031185 - 3 Feb 2026
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Abstract
Background/Objectives: Non-atherosclerotic pathological findings on coronary arteries involve various disorders that might lead to myocardial ischemia, independent of plaque complications and consequent lumen narrowing and obstruction. These patients often present with non-specific symptoms such as shortness of breath, rapid fatigue, and exertional [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Non-atherosclerotic pathological findings on coronary arteries involve various disorders that might lead to myocardial ischemia, independent of plaque complications and consequent lumen narrowing and obstruction. These patients often present with non-specific symptoms such as shortness of breath, rapid fatigue, and exertional chest tightness. When the underlying causes are non-atherosclerotic, these findings are frequently overlooked in radiology reports as a possible differential diagnosis. Therefore, the objective of this paper is to present the role of multidetector computed tomography (MD CT) coronary angiography in the diagnostic work-up of patients with rare but clinically valuable non-atherosclerotic pathological conditions of coronary arteries. Methods: We performed a literature search on Medline (via PubMed) for works presenting data on rare, non-occlusive, pathological findings on coronary arteries. Results: The review of the collected literature was performed in a narrative manner, intended to summarize mainly findings of imaging characteristics of non-occlusive pathologies: myocardial bridge, coronary aneurysm, ectasia, fistula, stenosis, and dissection. MD CT images of selected cases that were examined at our department, showing non-occlusive pathological changes in the coronary arteries, are displayed in planar and/or volume-rendered formats. Conclusions: Non-atherosclerotic abnormalities of the coronary vessel wall should be considered in the differential diagnosis of coronary causes of chest pain, dyspnea, and arrhythmias, as they may lead to both acute and chronic myocardial ischemia. Based on the presented literature and specific cases from our clinical practice, MD CT is shown to be an important tool for the rapid, non-invasive evaluation of non-atherosclerotic pathologies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Clinical Updates in Cardiovascular Computed Tomography (CT))
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23 pages, 974 KB  
Systematic Review
Performance of Large Language Models for Radiology Report Impression Generation: A Systematic Review
by Curtise K. C. Ng, Zhonghua Sun and Ian K. H. Te
Technologies 2026, 14(2), 99; https://doi.org/10.3390/technologies14020099 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 73
Abstract
No systematic review has previously examined the application of large language models (LLMs) for generating impressions from radiology report findings. This study systematically reviews the performance of LLMs on this task and their associated evaluation methodologies. A search of seven electronic databases on [...] Read more.
No systematic review has previously examined the application of large language models (LLMs) for generating impressions from radiology report findings. This study systematically reviews the performance of LLMs on this task and their associated evaluation methodologies. A search of seven electronic databases on 7 August 2025 identified 15 eligible papers (average quality score: 71.4%). These articles evaluated 35 LLMs, including 21 base models. The reported performance ranges were as follows: Recall-Oriented Understudy for Gisting Evaluation (ROUGE)-1, 35.9% (Generative Pre-Trained Transformer (GPT)-4) to 69.7% (Baichuan2-13B); ROUGE-2, 13.4% (Large Language Model Meta AI (Llama)) to 52.4% (Baichuan2-13B); and ROUGE-L, 16.5% (Chat General Language Model–Medical (ChatGLM-Med)) to 63.8% (finetuned Text-to-Text Transfer Transformer (T5)). The finetuned T5 consistently demonstrated high performance, based on Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers Score (BERTScore): 89.2%; BiLingual Evaluation Understudy (BLEU)-1: 65.2%; BLEU-2: 57.9%; BLEU-3: 52.5%; BLEU-4: 48.3%; Metric for Evaluation of Translation with Explicit ORdering (METEOR): 38.1%; ROUGE-1: 59.9%; ROUGE-2: 50.9%; ROUGE-L: 63.8%; and subjective metrics (clinical usability: 4.5/5.0; completeness: 4.3/5.0; conciseness: 4.3/5.0; fluency: 4.4/5.0). These results, based on 132,043 computed tomography, echocardiography, magnetic resonance imaging, and X-ray reports, indicate its strong clinical potential for assisting radiologists in impression generation through supervised finetuning rather than prompting techniques used in closed-source LLMs. Full article
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21 pages, 1604 KB  
Communication
Assessing the Diagnostic Accuracy of BiomedCLIP for Detecting Contrast Use and Esophageal Strictures in Pediatric Radiography
by Artur Fabijan, Michał Kolejwa, Agnieszka Zawadzka-Fabijan, Robert Fabijan, Róża Kosińska, Emilia Nowosławska, Anna Socha-Banasiak, Natalia Lwow, Marcin Tkaczyk, Krzysztof Zakrzewski, Elżbieta Czkwianianc and Bartosz Polis
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(3), 1150; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15031150 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 73
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Vision–language models such as BiomedCLIP are increasingly investigated for their diagnostic potential in medical imaging. Although these foundation models show promise in general radiographic interpretation, their application in pediatric domains—particularly for subtle, postoperative findings like esophageal strictures—remains underexplored. This study aimed [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Vision–language models such as BiomedCLIP are increasingly investigated for their diagnostic potential in medical imaging. Although these foundation models show promise in general radiographic interpretation, their application in pediatric domains—particularly for subtle, postoperative findings like esophageal strictures—remains underexplored. This study aimed to evaluate the diagnostic performance of BiomedCLIP in classifying pediatric esophageal radiographs into three clinically relevant categories: presence of contrast agent, full esophageal visibility, and presence of esophageal stricture. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 143 pediatric esophageal X-rays collected between 2021 and 2025. Each image was annotated by two pediatric radiology experts and categorized according to esophageal visibility, contrast presence, and stricture occurrence. BiomedCLIP was used in a zero-shot classification setup without fine-tuning. Model predictions were converted into binary outcomes and assessed against the ground truth using a comprehensive suite of 27 performance metrics, including accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, F1-score, AUC, and calibration analyses. Results: BiomedCLIP achieved high precision (88.7%) and a favorable AUC (85.4%) in detecting contrast agent presence, though specificity remained low (20%), leading to a high false-positive rate. The model correctly identified all cases of non-visible esophagus, but was untestable in predicting full visibility due to the absence of positive cases. Critically, its performance in detecting esophageal strictures was poor, with accuracy at 24%, sensitivity at 44%, specificity at 18%, and AUC of 0.26. Statistical overlap between contrast and stricture predictions indicated a lack of semantic differentiation within the model’s latent space. Conclusions: BiomedCLIP shows potential in detecting high-salience features such as contrast but fails to reliably identify esophageal strictures. Limitations include class imbalance, absence of fine-tuning, and architectural constraints in recognizing subtle morphologic abnormalities. These findings emphasize the need for domain-specific adaptation of foundation models before clinical implementation in pediatric radiology. Full article
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12 pages, 1586 KB  
Article
Interobserver and Intraobserver Reliability of a Novel Classification System for Distal Radioulnar Joint Instability
by Awad Dmour, Alexandra Maria Burlui, Bianca-Ana Dmour, Ștefan-Dragoș Tîrnovanu, Dragoș-Cristian Popescu, Mihaela Camelia Tîrnovanu, Liliana Savin, Mihaela Pertea, Tudor Cozma, Adrian Claudiu Carp, Paul-Dan Sîrbu and Bogdan Puha
Life 2026, 16(2), 243; https://doi.org/10.3390/life16020243 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 94
Abstract
A clinically useful classification system requires precise definitions, reproducibility, and applicability across different levels of clinical experience. Distal radioulnar joint instability remains insufficiently represented in fracture based classifications, contributing to diagnostic uncertainty and variability in treatment strategies. This retrospective observational study assessed the [...] Read more.
A clinically useful classification system requires precise definitions, reproducibility, and applicability across different levels of clinical experience. Distal radioulnar joint instability remains insufficiently represented in fracture based classifications, contributing to diagnostic uncertainty and variability in treatment strategies. This retrospective observational study assessed the interobserver and intraobserver reliability of a previously proposed classification system for distal radioulnar joint instability. Five orthopedic surgeons, including three board-certified specialists and two final year residents, independently evaluated forty five clinical cases comprising distal radius fractures, Galeazzi fractures, and Essex Lopresti injuries, using predefined clinical and radiological criteria. Interobserver agreement was analyzed using Fleiss Kappa statistics, while intraobserver reliability was evaluated after a two week interval using Cohen Kappa. Overall interobserver agreement was excellent, with a global Fleiss Kappa value of 0.87. Agreement was highest in Galeazzi fractures and lowest in Essex Lopresti injuries, reflecting increased diagnostic complexity in this subgroup. Specialists demonstrated higher agreement than residents. Intraobserver reproducibility was excellent, with identical classifications in 96 percent of reassessed cases. These findings indicate that the proposed classification system shows high reliability and reproducibility, supporting its potential clinical utility for standardized assessment of distal radioulnar joint instability and for guiding future clinical and biomechanical research. Full article
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14 pages, 483 KB  
Article
Factors Affecting Mortality and Clinical Outcomes in Intensive Care Unit Patients with Thoracic Trauma: A Retrospective, Single-Center Study
by Yeşim Şerife Bayraktar, Tuba Şahinoğlu, Yasemin Cebeci, Dilara Cari Güngör, Büşra Pekince, Muslu Kazım Körez, Atilla Can and Jale Bengi Çelik
Medicina 2026, 62(2), 294; https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina62020294 - 2 Feb 2026
Viewed by 74
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Thoracic trauma usually results in high morbidity and mortality. It is the leading cause of death in patients within the first four decades of life. In this study, we aimed to identify risk factors for intensive care mortality and [...] Read more.
Background and Objectives: Thoracic trauma usually results in high morbidity and mortality. It is the leading cause of death in patients within the first four decades of life. In this study, we aimed to identify risk factors for intensive care mortality and to evaluate factors affecting clinical outcomes and complications in patients with thoracic trauma who were treated in the intensive care unit (ICU). Materials and Methods: This was a retrospective, single-center study. Patients diagnosed with thoracic trauma and followed up in the ICU between 1 May 2023 and 1 January 2025 were included. Critically ill patients aged 18 years and older whose admission blood values were available and who had undergone radiological imaging were included in the study. Patients were grouped as Survivors or Non-survivors. The primary outcome was to determine risk factors for mortality. The secondary outcome was to evaluate factors affecting clinical outcomes and complications. The tertiary outcome was to determine the predictive value of the Injury Severity Score (ISS), Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II (APACHE II), and Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) for mortality. Results: A total of 104 patients (male/female ratio: 76/28) were included in the study. Twenty-four patients (23.1%) died, and eighty (76.9%) were discharged. Age in the Non-survivor group was found to be significantly higher (59.33 ± 22.21 vs. 40.50 ± 17.71; p < 0.001), and the proportion of women was also significantly higher in the Non-survivor group (p = 0.0082). Mortality was associated with advanced age, female sex, lower GCS score (p < 0.001), higher APACHE II scores (p < 0.001), and the presence of comorbid conditions (p = 0.003), including head trauma (p = 0.024) and cardiac arrest before ICU admission (p = 0.011). The Non-survivor group more frequently required mechanical ventilation (p < 0.001), vasopressor support (p < 0.001), and continuous renal replacement therapy (p < 0.001), and they developed ventilator-associated pneumonia (p < 0.001) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (p < 0.001) at higher rates. ICU length of stay was also significantly longer in the Non-survivor group (p = 0.045). The APACHE II score demonstrated the highest discriminatory performance, emerging as the strongest clinical predictor of mortality (AUC = 0.751, 95% CI: 0.630–0.872; p < 0.001). Age (OR: 1.06) and serum lactate levels (OR: 1.57) consistently emerged as strong independent predictors of mortality. The presence of head trauma significantly increased the risk of mortality, particularly in the APACHE II-adjusted model (OR: 9.08). The APACHE II–based model yielded high specificity (96.3%) and accuracy (88.5%), with good discrimination (AUC = 0.894) and the highest Nagelkerke R2 (0.548). Conclusions: Factors that may shorten the length of ICU stay include infection control, early correction of acidosis, and maintenance of hemodynamic stability, which may reduce mortality. APACHE II was more closely related to overall clinical severity than the other scoring systems. Our data indicate that age-related frailty and acute physiological derangement, as best represented by the APACHE II score, are more significant determinants of survival than anatomic injury severity alone. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Intensive Care/ Anesthesiology)
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15 pages, 2724 KB  
Article
Radiological and Clinical Outcomes After Navigated Tubular Unilateral Laminotomy for Bilateral Decompression (ULBD) for Lumbar Spinal Stenosis Among Patients with Concurrent Degenerative Scoliosis: A Short-Term Retrospective Case Series
by Mateusz Bielecki, Chibuikem A. Ikwuegbuenyi, Yizhou Xie, Jessica Berger, Catherine Mykolajtchuk, Anne Schlumprecht, Rodolfo Villalobos-Diaz, Noah Willett, Mousa K. Hamad, Galal Elsayed, Ibrahim Hussain, Osama N. Kashlan and Roger Härtl
Brain Sci. 2026, 16(2), 183; https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci16020183 - 1 Feb 2026
Viewed by 142
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Adult degenerative scoliosis (ADS) is a spinal disease causing pain and reduced mobility, often occurring with degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis (DLSS). While fusion stabilizes the spine, it has drawbacks like loss of motion and adjacent segment degeneration. Minimally invasive techniques, such as [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Adult degenerative scoliosis (ADS) is a spinal disease causing pain and reduced mobility, often occurring with degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis (DLSS). While fusion stabilizes the spine, it has drawbacks like loss of motion and adjacent segment degeneration. Minimally invasive techniques, such as tubular unilateral laminotomy for bilateral decompression (tULBD), provide a less invasive alternative, but their impact on ADS with DLSS is underexplored. This study examines the short-term effects of navigated tULBD on radiological and clinical outcomes in this patient population. Methods: This retrospective single-center study analyzed patients aged ≥18 years with DLSS and ADS (Cobb angle ≥ 10°), with or without grade I spondylolisthesis, who underwent navigated tULBD between June 2019 and October 2022. Radiological parameters were assessed pre- and post-operatively using AI-powered FXA™ Version 1.33, Raylytic Software GmbH, Leipzig, Germany, while clinical outcomes were evaluated using the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) and Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) for back and leg pain. Statistical analyses were conducted with R Studio. Results: This study included 20 patients (mean age 74.6 ± 7.6 years, body mass index [BMI] 26.08 ± 3.7 kg/m2), with a median follow-up of 2 months. Most underwent single-level decompression (45%), with a median of 2 surgical levels (IQR: 1–3). Radiological parameters showed no significant changes (p > 0.05). Clinically, the median NRS back improved from 5 (IQR: 3–9) preoperatively to 2 (IQR: 0–2) postoperatively (p = 0.009) and 1 (IQR: 0–4.5) at follow-up (p = 0.004). NRS leg scores dropped from 3.5 (IQR: 0–5) to 0 postoperatively and at follow-up (p = 0.02, p = 0.04). ODI improved from 37.8 (IQR: 29–42.5) preoperatively to 17.5 (IQR: 5–24) at follow-up (p = 0.04). There were no neurological complications. Conclusions: Navigated tULBD is a promising, minimally invasive option for mild ADS and DLSS. It provides significant pain and disability relief without adversely affecting stability and alignment. Long-term studies are needed to confirm durability and efficacy, particularly in severe cases. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Novel Techniques in Spine Neurosurgery)
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12 pages, 12941 KB  
Interesting Images
“Dry Tap” Fine-Needle Aspiration Biopsy as a Diagnostic Clue in Cyst-like Juvenile Jaw Lesions Mimicking Dentigerous Cysts on Panoramic Radiography and Cone-Beam Computed Tomography
by Kamil Nelke, Klaudiusz Łuczak, Ömer Uranbey, Büşra Ekinci, Angela Rosa Caso, Michał Gontarz, Maciej Janeczek, Zygmunt Stopa, Piotr Kuropka and Maciej Dobrzyński
Diagnostics 2026, 16(3), 439; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics16030439 - 1 Feb 2026
Viewed by 95
Abstract
Pediatric odontogenic tumors are rare but are frequently overlooked because they often mimic simple cysts on routine radiographic examinations. The radiographic appearance on panoramic imaging and cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) frequently does not correlate with the true biological nature of these lesions. On [...] Read more.
Pediatric odontogenic tumors are rare but are frequently overlooked because they often mimic simple cysts on routine radiographic examinations. The radiographic appearance on panoramic imaging and cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) frequently does not correlate with the true biological nature of these lesions. On CBCT, classic odontogenic tumors often demonstrate mixed radiolucent–radiopaque patterns with ill-defined borders, internal calcifications, septations, or other structural features. The diagnostic challenge arises when an odontogenic tumor mimics a unilateral, well-defined radiolucent area or a cystic lesion with clear borders and no associated tooth displacement, erosion, root resorption, or cortical bone dehiscence. Panoramic radiography has inherent diagnostic limitations but remains widely used for routine dental screening. CBCT provides enhanced three-dimensional assessment and improves diagnostic accuracy in the evaluation of jaw lesions. A marked increase in dental follicle diameter necessitates differentiation between cystic transformation, inflammatory processes, and other odontogenic pathologies. Cortical swelling and bone asymmetry warrant careful evaluation. In this context, an atypical cyst-like lesion detected on routine panoramic radiography prompted a needle aspiration biopsy, which revealed a dry tap and suggested a solid lesion. This prompted CBCT evaluation. Two juvenile cases are presented in which clinical findings, panoramic radiography, and CBCT provided discordant diagnostic impressions of cystic-appearing lesions with well-defined borders and bone expansion. These cases illustrate a diagnostic pathway in which imaging demonstrates a cyst-like appearance with benign radiological features, fine-needle aspiration biopsy reveals the absence of cystic fluid, and histopathology confirms that radiology alone cannot reliably distinguish true cysts from solid odontogenic tumors in pediatric patients. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Pathology and Diagnosis of Head and Neck Diseases)
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11 pages, 409 KB  
Article
Diagnostic Accuracy of PSMA-PET/CT vs. mpMRI in Primary Staging of Intermediate- and High-Risk Prostate Cancer
by Vanessa Talavera Cobo, Carlos Andres Yánez Ruiz, Mario Daniel Tapia Tapia, Andres Calva Lopez, Carmina Alejandra Muñoz Bastidas, Francisco Javer Ancizu Marckert, Marcos Torres Roca, Luis Labairu Huerta, Daniel Sanchez Zalabardo, Fernando Jose Diez-Caballero Alonso, Francisco Guillen-Grima, Jose E. Robles García and Bernardino Miñana-López
Med. Sci. 2026, 14(1), 64; https://doi.org/10.3390/medsci14010064 - 31 Jan 2026
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Abstract
Background: Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is markedly overexpressed in prostate cancer (PCa), and there is growing evidence to support its usefulness in initial diagnostic assessments. This study compares the diagnostic performance of PSMA positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) [...] Read more.
Background: Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is markedly overexpressed in prostate cancer (PCa), and there is growing evidence to support its usefulness in initial diagnostic assessments. This study compares the diagnostic performance of PSMA positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) in evaluating seminal vesicle invasion (SVI), extraprostatic extension (EPE), and pelvic lymph node involvement before radical prostatectomy. Methods: A retrospective, single-institution analysis was performed. From a cohort of 325 patients who underwent radical prostatectomy between June 2022 to November 2024, 85 had undergone preoperative PSMA PET/CT for intermediate- and high-risk disease at biopsy, forming our study group. Two blinded specialists, one in radiology and one in nuclear medicine, independently interpreted the scans, using histopathological results as the reference standard. The primary outcome was diagnostic accuracy for T- and N-stage classification, while the secondary outcomes included the correct identification of the index lesion and comparative performance for each modality. Results: The study cohort comprised patients with intermediate-to-high-risk prostate cancer (median age: 66 years; median PSA level: 11.6 ng/mL; median PSA density: 0.3 ng/mL/cm3). Forty-eight patients presented with an ISUP grade of 3 or higher on biopsy. PSMA PET/CT was more sensitive than MRI for detecting EPE (72.2% vs. 46.9%) and nodal metastases (91.7% vs. 8.3%). Furthermore, PSMA PET/CT demonstrated significantly higher concordance with histopathological findings in index tumor localization (76.5% vs. 67.9%, p < 0.001). An exploratory analysis revealed a potential age-dependent pattern, but this requires confirmation in larger studies. Conclusions: In this select cohort, PSMA PET/CT demonstrated greater accuracy than MRI for locoregional staging in patients with intermediate-to-high-risk prostate cancer (PCa). However, the generalizability of these findings is limited by the retrospective design and potential selection bias. These results suggest that PSMA PET/CT may have a valuable role in the initial staging workflow, but this needs to be confirmed in larger, prospective studies. An exploratory analysis suggested a potential age-dependent pattern, but this requires confirmation in larger studies. Full article
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27 pages, 6214 KB  
Review
Gastric-Type Cervical Adenocarcinoma: Clinicopathologic Features, Molecular Landscape, and Therapeutic Challenges
by Hiroshi Yoshida, Daiki Higuchi, Waku Takigawa, Nao Kikkawa, Taro Yamanaka, Ayaka Nagao, Mayumi Kobayashi-Kato, Masaya Uno, Mitsuya Ishikawa and Kouya Shiraishi
J. Pers. Med. 2026, 16(2), 72; https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm16020072 - 31 Jan 2026
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Abstract
Endocervical adenocarcinoma is now classified within an etiologic framework based on the presence or absence of high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. Gastric-type endocervical adenocarcinoma (GAS) is the prototypical HPV-independent subtype, accounting for up to 25% of endocervical adenocarcinomas and showing a particularly high [...] Read more.
Endocervical adenocarcinoma is now classified within an etiologic framework based on the presence or absence of high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. Gastric-type endocervical adenocarcinoma (GAS) is the prototypical HPV-independent subtype, accounting for up to 25% of endocervical adenocarcinomas and showing a particularly high frequency in East Asia. GAS is typically diagnosed at a more advanced stage than usual-type HPV-associated endocervical adenocarcinoma (UEA); exhibits deep stromal and parametrial invasion, lymphovascular space invasion, and a strong propensity for ovarian and peritoneal metastasis; and is associated with markedly worse survival, even in stage I disease. Radiological evaluation is challenging because of diffuse infiltrative growth, prominent mucin production, and frequent underestimation of extra-cervical spread. Histologically, GAS shows gastric-type (pyloric) differentiation, ranging from minimal deviation adenocarcinoma to poorly differentiated forms, and often overlaps with precursor lesions such as atypical lobular endocervical glandular hyperplasia and gastric-type adenocarcinoma in situ. Immunophenotypically, GAS is typically p16-negative, ER/PR-negative, and frequently exhibits mutant-type p53 and expression of gastric markers including MUC6, HIK1083, and claudin 18.2. Recent next-generation sequencing and multi-omics studies have revealed recurrent alterations in TP53, CDKN2A, STK11, KRAS, ARID1A, KMT2D, and homologous recombination-related genes, together with the activation of PI3K/AKT, WNT/β-catenin, TGF-β, and EMT pathways and characteristic metabolic reprogramming. GAS is highly resistant to conventional chemotherapy and radiotherapy, and its current management follows guidelines for squamous and usual-type adenocarcinoma. Emerging data support precision-medicine approaches targeting HER2/HER3, PD-1/PD-L1, and claudin 18.2, and suggest a role for PARP inhibition and other genotype-directed therapies in selected subsets. Given its aggressive biology and rising relative incidence in the HPV-vaccination era, GAS represents a critical unmet need in gynecologic oncology. Future progress hinges on developing reliable diagnostic biomarkers, refining imaging protocols, and validating targeted therapies through international clinical trials. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Molecular Pathology in Cancer Research)
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12 pages, 1314 KB  
Article
Prevalence and Morphological Classification of Persistent Metopic Suture in Adult Autopsy Cases: A Forensic Anatomical Study from Western Türkiye
by Gökmen Karabağ, Volkan Zeybek, Ahmet Küpeli, Mehmet Sunay Yavuz, Mahmut Aşırdizer, Ertuğrul Tatlısumak and Aslıhan Teyin
Diagnostics 2026, 16(3), 415; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics16030415 - 30 Jan 2026
Viewed by 209
Abstract
Background: Persistent metopic suture represents a normal anatomical variant that may persist into adulthood and can be misinterpreted as a frontal skull fracture, particularly in trauma-related forensic cases. Despite its clinical and medico-legal relevance, data derived from autopsy-based evaluations remain limited, with most [...] Read more.
Background: Persistent metopic suture represents a normal anatomical variant that may persist into adulthood and can be misinterpreted as a frontal skull fracture, particularly in trauma-related forensic cases. Despite its clinical and medico-legal relevance, data derived from autopsy-based evaluations remain limited, with most prevalence studies relying on dry skull collections or radiological series. This study aimed to determine the prevalence and morphological characteristics of persistent metopic suture in adult autopsy cases and to evaluate its distribution according to age, sex, and cause of death. Methods: This cross-sectional study included 500 consecutive adult autopsy cases (≥18 years). The frontal bone was directly inspected during autopsy for the presence of metopic suture, which was classified as complete or incomplete. Descriptive statistics were applied, and associations between metopism and sex, age group, and cause of death were analyzed using chi-square or Fisher’s exact test, as appropriate. Results: Complete metopism was identified in 7 of 500 cases, corresponding to a prevalence of 1.4% (95% confidence interval: approximately 0.6–2.9%). No incomplete metopic sutures were observed. Metopism was slightly more frequent in females than males; however, no statistically significant association was found between metopism and sex, age group, or cause of death (p > 0.05). Conclusions: Persistent metopic suture is an uncommon but clinically and forensically relevant anatomical variant in adults. Its recognition during forensic autopsy is essential to avoid misinterpretation as a cranial fracture, particularly in trauma-related deaths, thereby preventing diagnostic and medico-legal errors. Full article
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