March 2015 Imaging Case of the Month
Tuesday, March 3, 2015 at 7:38PM
Rick Robbins, M.D. in CT scan, Tc-Mercaptoacetyltriglycine renal scan, Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome, chest radiograph, chest x-ray, nephropleural fistula, pleural effusion, renal scan, thoracentesis, urinothorax

Michael B. Gotway, MD

  

Department of Radiology

Mayo Clinic Arizona

Scottsdale, AZ

 

Clinical History: A 35-year-old man presented with a history of Von Hippel-Lindau syndrome, including prior right-sided renal cell carcinomas, cerebellar hemangioblastomas, and retinal hemangiomas. The patient’s renal malignancies were treated with laparoscopic radiofrequency ablations 6 and 8 years prior to presentation, and subsequently with percutaneous microwave ablations in the interim between 2008 and presentation. The latest percutaneous microwave ablation procedure (Figure 1) was performed to address two nodular enhancing foci in the posterior superior pole of the right kidney and one interpolar enhancing, septated lesion that were noted to have enlarged slightly on a recent MRI examination (Figure 2) of the abdomen compared with one year earlier.

 

 Figure 1. Percutaneous microwave of three right-sided renal lesions, 2 posterior-superior pole, the other lateral interpolar in location, shows two NeuWave microwave antennas inserted into suspicious lesions in the right kidney.

 

 

 

 

 

Figure 2. MRI of abdomen (A and B, axial steady-state free precession fat saturation images and, C and D, coronal subtraction contrast-enhanced images) shows three potentially solid, enhancing foci, two in the posterior and superior pole of the right kidney (arrowheads), and one in the lateral interpolar kidney, the latter with thick septations (arrow) that have shown slight enlargement from MR. performed one year previously.

A CT of the abdomen (Figure 3), performed 2 years earlier, is shown as a baseline comparison.

Figure 3.  Upper panel: selected image from the CT of the abdomen performed 2 years prior to presentation shows enlargement of the bilateral kidneys with numerous, bilateral renal cystic lesions. No pleural or lung base abnormality is evident. Lower panel: movie of CT scan performed 2 years prior to presentation.

 

Several days following the percutaneous microwave ablation procedure, the patient complained of right-sided chest pain, and frontal chest radiography was performed (Figure 4). 

 

Figure 4. Frontal and lateral chest radiography performed several days following the right-sided percutaneous microwave ablation procedure.

Which of the following statements regarding the chest radiograph is most accurate? (Click on the correct answer to proceed to the second of seven panels)

 

 

Reference as: Gotway MB. March 2015 imaging case of the month. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2015;10(3):112-24. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13175/swjpcc031-15 PDF

Article originally appeared on Southwest Journal of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep (https://www.swjpcc.com/).
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