Classic Case: Bronchopulmonary Sequestration
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- čas přidán 19. 05. 2024
- Classic case of bronchopulmonary sequestration (BPS).
Textbooks I like for chest radiology-
Med students and all residents: Felson’s Principles of Chest Roentgenology
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Radiology residents: Thoracic Imaging: Pulmonary and Cardiovascular Radiology
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Thoracic radiology fellows: Muller’s Imaging of the Chest: Expert Radiology Series
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00:00 Chest radiograph
00:54 Chest CT
01:27 Diagnosis
02:34 Definition of BPS
02:53 Intralobar vs Extralobar
04:10 Treatment
04:21 Conclusion
I had a hard time understanding the concept of lung sequestration until I saw this lecture. Great content!
An Excellent lecture. I think a companion case of extralobar BPS would make it perfect.
Great case. Beautiful explanation. Thank you.
you welcome haha
Excellent case sir
excellent , thank you very much
Very cool!
Could you address congenital lung malformations from radiology perspective in a separate video?
Excellent presentation. Are lateral xrays helpful for left lower lobe lesions, then?
yes, the lateral view is helpful for determining whether something is in the lower or upper lobes.
Excellent lecture. I was wondering that since there is no discrete mass/ lesion on the right side, would it qualify as anomalous systemic arterial supply to a normal lung that means psuedosequestration rather than true sequestration. Especially, if it has a normal bronchus supplying it. Anyways, really great case and very good explanation .
Interesting, I don't know much about pseudosequestration but found a radiographics article talking about them. They defined these as pseudo if the feeding vessel is a tangle of small vessels rather than one large vessel.
Very good case , but do you really picked it up on cxr first ? Or was it retrospective catch ! Difficult one .
Haha, it wasn't my case. A colleague of mine called it on the CXR, so I can't take full credit.
🥰🥰
For me ,, I will see this opacity as a mass rather than consolidation, what is your opinion?🙂
If you didn't see the systemic artery, I think it would be possible to confuse this as a mass. But if you see the vessel, you will likely think that it is pneumonia and not a mass.