Journal Club ❯ September 2004
- Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms at Multi-Detector Row Helical CT: Optimization with Interactive Determination of Scanning Delay and Contrast Medium Dose
- Abdominal Wall Hernias: MDCT Findings
- Ankle and Foot Injuries: Analysis of MDCT Findings
- Asthma and Associated Conditions: High-Resolution CT and Pathologic Findings
- Atypical CT and MRI Manifestations of Mature Ovarian Cystic Teratomas
- Collateral Pathways in Thoracic Central Venous Obstruction: Three-Dimensional Display Using Direct Spiral Computed Tomography Venography
- Detection of Recurrence in Patients with Rectal Cancer: PET/CT after Abdominoperineal or Anterior Resection
- Imaging of the Various Continent Urinary Diversions After Cystectomy
- Intrahepatic Portal-to-Portal Venous Shunts in Cirrhosis: A Potential Mimic of Hepotocellular Carcinoma
- Intussusception in Adults: From Stomach to Rectum
- MDCT of the Left Atrium and Pulmonary Veins in Planning Radiofrequency Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation: A How-To Guide
- Multidetector-Row Computed Tomography and 3-Dimensional Computed Tomography Imaging of Small Bowel Neoplasms: Current Concept in Diagnosis
- Multidetector-Row Computed Tomography Angiography for Planning Intra-Arterial Chemotherapy Pump Placement in Patients With Colorectal Metastases to the Liver
- Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma and Hodgkin Disease: Coregistered FDG PET and CT at Staging and Restaging—Do We Need Contrast-enhanced CT?
- Normal Anatomy and Disease Processes of the Pancreatoduodenal Groove: Imaging Features
- Patterns of Collateral Pathways in Extrahepatic Portal Hypertension as Demonstrated by Multidetector Row Computed Tomography and Advanced Image Processing
- Reduced Radiation Dose Helical Chest CT: Effect on Reader Evaluation of Structures and Lung Findings
- Reliability of Differentiating Human Coronary Plaque Morphology Using Contrast-Enhanced Multislice Spiral Computed Tomography: A Comparison With Histology
- Value of Multiplanar Reformations (MPR) in Multidetector CT (MDCT) of Acute Vertebral Fractures: Do We Still Have to Read the Transverse Images?
