EQ - TEST PAPER 3 Flashcards

1
Q

1.A 77-year-old man presents with a progressively enlarging pulsatile mass in the leftgroin corresponding to the puncture site of a previous coronary angiography.
Urgent outpatient ultrasound shows a large anechoic lesion with peripheral filling defectand arterial pattern intraluminal flow. What is most appropriate management plan?

A. Covered stent

B. Ultrasound-guided compression

C. Ultrasound-guided thrombin injection

D. Open surgery

E. CT angiogram first for treatment planning

A

1.C. Ultrasound-guided thrombin injection

Pseudoaneurysms are common vascular abnormalities that represent a disruption in arterial wallcontinuity.
Surgical repair was the treatment of choice for superficial extremity pseudoaneurysms untilUS-guided compression was introduced. US-guided percutaneous thrombin injection has replaced US-guided compression as the therapeutic method of choice for treatment of post catheterisation pseudoaneurysms. Endovascular techniques like stent placement (indispensable artery) or embolisation (dispensable artery) have a lower complication rate in the treatment of visceral pseudoaneurysms than does surgical management.

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2
Q

3.A 17-year-old girl is newly diagnosed with Crohn’s disease and an MR enterography has beenrequested for evaluation of the disease extent and distribution. All of the following arc latefindings of Crohn’s disease on MRE, except

A. Fistulae

B.Skip lesions

C. Strictures

D. Small bowel obstruction

E. Ulcers

A

3.E. Ulcers
At pathologic analysis, active inflammation is characterised by varying degrees of neutrophiliccrypt injury. In mildly active Crohn’s disease, a small fraction of crypts arc infiltrated by neutrophils (cryptitis), with associated crypt destruction and mucin depletion.
As the degree of activity increases, there is a corresponding increase in the proportion of involved crypts and the severity of crypt injury, including crypt epithelial necrosis, intraluminal exudates (crypt abscess), and eventual ulcer formation. Two types of ulcers are seen in Crohn’s disease: superficial aphthous ulcers and deep fissuring ulcers. Deep fissuring ulcers are more problematic than superficial aphthous ulcers; they break through the mucosa and into the deeper layers of the bowel wall, initially resulting in submucosal inflammation and oedema. Some investigators have reported that deep ulcers may be seen in MR enterography, whereas superficial ulcers defy detection.

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3
Q

4.A 76-year-old woman with one previous history of admission in the medical ward withacute renal failure 6 years ago has now been referred to the radiology department for aCT angiography of the lower limb arteries subject to symptoms of claudication. Therenal team were again involved when she developed acute worsening of renal functionafter the CT study. All the following are features of contrast-induced nephropathy,except

A. Alternative major insults to kidneys ruled out.

B.Increase in serum level of creatinine of 0.5 mg/dL.

C. Rise in serum creatinine level by >50% above baseline.

D. Increase in serum creatinine occurs 48-72 hours after administration of contrast.

E. Raised serum creatinine persists for 2-5 days.

A
  1. C. Rise in serum creatinine level by >50% above baseline.

Diagnosis of CIN (contrast-induced nephropathy) is most often based on an increase in the serum level of creatinine after exposure to a contrast agent. Diagnostic criteria for CIN include exposure to contrast agent, increase in serum level of creatinine of 0.5 mg/dL or 25% greater than baseline, increase in serum level of creatinine occurring 48-72 hours after administration of contrast agent and persisting for 2-5 days, and alternative major injuries being ruled out.

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4
Q
  1. A central mass with homogeneous signal intensity is identified on MRI in the fourth ventricle of a 4-year-old child. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Astrocytoma

B. Medulloblastoma

C. Ependymoma

D. Pontine glioma

E. Tectal plate glioma

A
  1. B. Medulloblastoma

Medulloblastoma is the most common infratentorial paediatric brain tumour. It typically presents as a midline, non-calcified solid vcrmal mass, obstructing the fourth ventricle.
Classic medulloblastoma typically arises from the roof of the fourth ventricle and is midline in location in 75% 90% of cases. Classic medulloblastoma is a highly cellular, densely packed tumour, which is reflected on imaging; it appears hyperdense relative to brain on CT (89% of cases) and shows restricted diffusion on DWI. This feature of medulloblastoma allows differentiation from JPA, ependymoma and brainstem glioma. Almost all medulloblastomas enhance post-contrast; the degree of enhancement varies from diffuse homogenous to heterogeneous.

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5
Q
  1. A young woman with positional headache shows a well-defined round mass at the anterior margin of the third ventricle with high signal on both T1W and T2W images. Asymmetrical lateral ventricular enlargement is evident. What is the diagnosis?

A. Colloid cyst

B. Choroid plexus cyst

C. Porencephalic cyst

D. ACA aneurysm

E. Haemorrhagic contusion

A
  1. A. Colloid cyst

The most common true mass of the foramen of Monro is a colloid cyst, a benign lesion that occurs in adult patients. This well defined round cyst may be from several millimeters to 3 cm in size and attaches to the anterior superior aspect of the third ventricle roof. Often hyperattenuating at non-enhanced CT, it has variable signal intensity at MR imaging and is often hyperintense on T1-weighted and FLAIR images. Peripheral gadolinium enhancement is rarely seen. Ninety percent of colloid cysts are asymptomatic and stable, whereas 10% are reported to enlarge or cause hydrocephalus. Rapid enlargement has been associated with coma and death.

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6
Q
  1. A CT scan of a 25-year old woman on OCP shows a focal area of low attenuation that demonstrates homogenous enhancement in the arterial phase with rapid washout on the portal venous and delayed phases. She presents a week later with an acute abdomen and hemodynamic instability. What is the most appropriate management?

A. Gel foam embolisation

B. Liver resection

C. Conservative management

D. Coil embolisation

E. Radiofrequency ablation

A
  1. D. Coil embolisation

Ruptured hepatic adenoma is a clinical emergency. Many adenomas are first diagnosed in symptomatic patients presenting with acute abdominal pain, hemodynamic instability, or other signs of rupture, most of whom are on OCP. The gold standard has been to perform emergency laparotomy with gauze packing or partial liver resection. Laparoscopic resection is also possible in theory, but it is technically difficult. Recently, less invasive procedures such as transarterial embolisation have been developed that may also lead to adequate haemostasis without the need for urgent laparotomy, and they are considered the first treatment option. RFA is used in non-ruptured adenomas and its use after haemorrhage may be irrelevant.

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7
Q
  1. A 36-year-old woman with small cystic lesions identified in the liver when she had an ultrasound assessment a year ago underwent a CT urogram for renal colic. The CT urogram revealed speckled calcification in the medulla of both kidneys. Review of an old IVU showed a striated nephrogram and filling defects in the proximal right ureter. What is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Hyperparathyroidism

B. Medullary sponge kidney

C. Medullary cystic disease

D. Acquired renal cystic disease

E. PCKD

A
  1. B. Medullary sponge kidney

Medullary sponge kidney involves dysplastic dilatation of medullary and papillary collecting ducts. It is known to be associated with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, parathyroid adenoma and Caroli’s disease. Recognised features include medullary nephrocalcinosis, ‘bunch of flower appearance’ and dense, striated nephrogram; it can affect a single kidney (25%) or single pyramids.
Note that papillary blush on IVU without dense streaks is a normal variant, especially when not associated with nephrocalcinosis.

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8
Q
  1. A 1 -year-old infant is admitted with acute stridor. A viral cause is suspected. On AP chest radiography no foreign body is identified, but there is an inverted V appearance of the subglottic trachea. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Foreign body

B. Acute laryngotracheobronchitis

C. Whooping cough

D. Tracheobronchomalacia

E. Epiglottitis

A
  1. B. Acute laryngotracheobronchitis

Croup (laryngotracheobronchitis) most commonly affects children between 6 months and 3 years and presents with acute stridor, usually following viral infection. A subglottic inverted V sign is seen on plain film, but the epiglottis and aryepiglottic folds are usually normal.
In contrast, epiglottitis is a life-threatening condition affecting 3-6-year-olds, with a lateral soft-tissue neck radiograph showing thickening of the epiglottis and aryepiglottic folds described as the ‘thumb sign’.

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9
Q
  1. A 46-year old woman with constant headache undergoes a CT brain for preliminary evaluation. CT brain reveals a suprasellar solid cystic lesion with some calcification.
    MRI confirms the suprasellar mass with high signal in both T1W and T2W images. Marginal enhancement of the peripheral solid rim portion of the lesion is also noted.
    What is the diagnosis?

A. Craniopharyngioma

B. Pituitary adenoma

C. Pineoblastoma

D. Meningioma

E. Dermoid cyst

A
  1. A. Craniopharyngioma

Craniopharyngiomas account for about 3% of all primary intracranial tumours. Two types of craniopharyngiomas have been described: a childhood type, with frequent occurrence of cyst formation and calcifications and generally a poor prognosis, and an adult type, generally without calcifications or cyst formation and generally a good prognosis.
The cystic areas may be iso-, hyper- or hypointense relative to brain tissue with T1 -weighted sequences. The short T1 relaxation times are the result of very high protein content. With T2-weighted sequences, both the cystic and solid components tend to have high signal intensity. After the administration of contrast material, the solid portions enhance heterogeneously. The thin walls of the cystic areas nearly always enhance. The characteristic calcifications in paediatric craniopharyngiomas may not be discernible, although gradient-echo images may show susceptibility effects from calcified components. Occasionally, craniopharyngiomas are predominantly solid, typically without calcification.

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10
Q
  1. A 10-year old girl is diagnosed with pilocytic astrocytoma. Which of the following are the most likely findings on MRI?

A. Hyperintense to brain on T1WI and hypointense on T2WI

B. Isointense to brain on T1WI and hypointense on T2WI

C. Isointense to brain on T1WI and isointense on T2WI

D. Hypointense to brain on T1WI and hyperintense on T2WI

E. Hyperintense to brain on T1WI and hyperintense on T2WI

A
  1. D. Hypointense to brain on T1WI and hyperintense on T2WI

Pilocytic astrocytoma typically presents in first two decades, with peak age from birth to 9 years of age. It is the most common paediatric glioma, with the majority located in the cerebellum. Pilocytic astrocytomas are predominantly cystic with an intensely enhancing mural nodule; half show enhancement of the cyst wall. The magnetic resonance signal pattern is as for cysts: hypointense on T1-weighted images and hyperintense on T2-weighted images.
Post contrast T1-weighted images shows enhancement of the mural nodule.

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11
Q
  1. A 53-year-old woman with chronic renal failure and polycystic renal disease had renal transplantation surgery 5 weeks ago. Initial recovery’ was uneventful and she is regularly being followed up by the transplant and the renal team. A follow-up graft ultrasound done at 5 weeks post-surgery reveals a large simple fluid collection in relation to the graft. What is the most likely explanation?

A. Abscess

B. Resolving haematoma

C. Lymphocele

D. Urinoma

E. Seroma

A
  1. C. Lymphocele

Urine leaks and urinomas are relatively rare complications and are usually found in the first 2 weeks post-operative between the transplanted kidney and the bladder. They appear as a well-defined, anechoic fluid collection with no septations that increases in size rapidly. Antegrade pyelography is necessary to provide detailed information about the site of origin of the urinoma and in planning appropriate intervention.

Haematomas are common in the immediate post-operative period, but they may also develop spontaneously or as a consequence of trauma or biopsy. At US, haematomas demonstrate a complex appearance. Acute haematomas are echogenic and become less echogenic with time. Older haematomas even appear anechoic, more closely resembling fluid, and septations may develop.

Lymphoceles are the most common peritransplant fluid collections that may develop at any time, from weeks to years after transplantation. However, they usually occur within 1-2 months after transplantation. At US, lymphoceles are anechoic and may have septations. Similar to other peritransplant fluid collections, they can become infected and can develop a more complex appearance.

Abscesses have a complex, cystic, non-specific appearance at US. Peritransplant abscesses are an uncommon complication and usually develop within the first few weeks after transplantation.

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12
Q
  1. A 43-year-old woman currently on treatment for known Crohn’s disease has recently been unwell again with a mildly raised CRP. MRI could not be performed because she wras claustrophobic, so a CT was done instead. Which one of the following statements concerning CT enterography for evaluation of small bowel Crohn’s disease is not true?

A. Patients should ideally ingest 1 L of positive oral contrast medium before the start of the examination.

B. Small bowel distension is a key factor in the examination.

C. Patients should ideally ingest 1 L of negative oral contrast medium before the start of the examination.

D. In CT enterography, CT scanning should start 65 seconds after the start of IV administration of contrast infusion.

E. Patients should fast for 4 hours before the exam.

A
  1. A. Patients should ideally ingest 1 L of positive oral contrast medium before the start of the
    examination.

Patients undergoing CT enterography are asked to withhold all oral intake, starting 4 hours before the examination. To improve visualisation of the mucosa and achieve better bowel distension, a negative oral contrast agent is administered. A typical regimen with regard to the timing of administration of oral contrast agents involves the ingestion of a total of 1.35 L over 1 hour 450 mL at 60 minutes, 450 mL at 40 minutes, 225 mL at 20 minutes and 225 mL at 10 minutes before scanning. After the oral contrast agent is ingested, a bolus of intravenous contrast material followed by 50 mL of saline solution is administered with a power injector at a rate of 4 mL/sec.
Helical scanning is performed from the diaphragm to the symphysis pubis, beginning 65 seconds after the administration of intravenous contrast material; it includes a single (venous) phase for the evaluation of known or suspected Crohn’s disease or dual (arterial and venous) phases for the evaluation of mesenteric vessels, GI tract bleeding and suspected tumours. Scanning parameters include a section thickness of 0.625 mm and interval of 0.625 mm.

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13
Q
  1. A 5-year old boy with a large head has widened sutures and Wormian bones on a skull radiograph. Review of other examinations performed earlier shows bilateral hypoplastic clavicles and delayed ossification of symphysis pubis. A chest radiograph shows supernumerary ribs. What is your diagnosis?

A. Hypothyroidism

B. Primary hyperparathyroidism

C. Cleidocranial dysostosis

D. Ehlers-Danlos syndrome

F. Downs syndrome

A
  1. C. Cleidocranial dysostosis

Cleidocranial dysplasia (CCD) is characterised by aplasia or hypoplasia of the clavicles, characteristic craniofacial malformations, and the presence of numerous supernumerary and unerupted teeth. Cranial abnormalities include wide open sutures, patent fontanelles and the presence of Wormian bones. Delayed closure of cranial sutures and fontanelles leads to frontal, parietal and occipital bossing. Additionally, there may be poor or absent pneumatization of paranasal, frontal and mastoid, and sphenoid sinuses.
Pelvic features include delayed ossification with wide pubic symphysis, hypoplastic iliac wings, widened sacroiliac joints and a large femoral neck resulting in coxa vara.
The differential diagnosis of CCD includes Crane-Heise syndrome (CCD with cleft lip and agenesis of cervical vertebra), mandibuloacral dysplasia (CCD plus hypoplastic mandible), pyknodysostosis (CCD and osteopetrosis), Yunis-Varon syndrome (CCD with hypoplastic thumb and big toe), CDAGS syndrome (craniosynostosis, anal anomalies and genital hyplasia).

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14
Q
  1. A child presents following a witnessed first seizure. An MRI scan is arranged. This shows a well-demarcated, T1 hypointense, T2 hyperintense supratentorial mass with a bright rim on FLAIR. There was no enhancement post-contrast. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Ependymoma

B. Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumour

C. Pilocytic astrocytoma

D. Oligodendroglioma

F. Ganglioglioma

A
  1. B. Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumour
    History of seizure that may be medically refractory makes dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumour (DNET) more likely.

DNET is a benign, supratentorial and predominantly cortical intra-axial lesion, characterised by a multinodular architecture. Although DNETs are usually located in the temporal lobe, any lobe within the brain lobes may be involved. They have a cortical base and an apex pointing towards the lateral ventricle. They are homogeneously hyperintense on T2-weighted images and hypointense on T1-weighted images. Some delicate septa like structures are visible within the lesions. Despite their size, neither mass effect nor surrounding parenchymal oedema is present. On FLAIR images, the lesions show a hyperintense ring. Susceptibility-weighted images do not depict any hypointense signal in the lesion, which indicates the absence of calcium or blood products. Very high ADC values are measured inside the mass. No contrast enhancement is noted and there is scalloping of overlying bone.
The differential diagnosis includes other brain tumours, such as ganglioglioma (cyst with a strongly enhancing mural nodule, frequent calcification), angiocentric glioma (hyperintense on Tl and star-like extension to ventricle), low grade astrocytoma (similar to DNET but no scalloping of bone or rim of FLAIR) and pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (cyst with mural nodule, enhancement and dural tail).

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15
Q
  1. HRCT shows numerous, randomly scattered thin walled cysts surrounded by normal lung parenchyma. There is interlobular septal thickening and a left pleural effusion. What is the likeliest diagnosis?

A. Neurofibromatosis

B. Langerhans cell histiocytosis

C. Lymphangiomyomatosis

D. Alfa-1 antitrypsin deficiency

E. Lymphocytic interstitial pneumonia

A
  1. C. Lymphangioleiomyomatosis

Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) is a rare disorder occurring almost exclusively in women of childbearing age. LAM associated with tuberous sclerosis is 5-10 times more common than sporadic LAM. Lymphatic obstruction may result in chylous pleural effusion, chylous ascites or both. Spontaneous or recurrent pneumothorax may be the presenting finding in up to 50% of patients.
Characteristic HRCT features of LAM are diffuse thin-walled cysts surrounded by normal lung without regional sparing. Cysts are usually 2-5 mm but can be as large as 25-30 mm. Cysts are typically round or ovoid, but they may become polygonal with severe parenchymal involvement. Small centrilobular nodules and focal ground-glass opacities have been reported. Lymphatic obstruction may cause septal thickening.

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16
Q
  1. A 23-year-old woman with recent diagnosis of Crohn’s disease is referred for cross-sectional imaging to assess disease status by the gastroenterology team. She has been booked
    for MR enterography and will be followed up with MRI. Which of the following statement is false?

A. MR enterography has less sensitivity and specificity compared to MR enteroclysis for established disease.

B. MR enteroclysis is better than MR enterography for demonstrating mucosal abnormalities.

C. MR imaging provides superior soft-tissue contrast and excellent depiction of fluid and oedema.

D. MR enterography is more acceptable to the patient than MR enteroclysis.

E. Jejunal distension is better with MR enteroclysis.

A
  1. A. MR enterography has less sensitivity and specificity compared to MR enteroclysis for established disease.

The benefits of using enteric contrast material to achieve bowel distension for cross-sectional imaging are not disputed, although the optimal type of contrast material and method of administration remain somewhat controversial.
Current data suggest that although bowel distension achieved with the enteric intubation technique generally is superior to that achieved with enterography, the improved distension does not necessarily translate into a clinically significant improvement in diagnostic effectiveness.
A recent study confirmed the benefit of enteric intubation for bowel distension but reported equivalent diagnostic performances with the enteric and oral techniques in identifying stenoses and fistulas. However, MR enteroclysis was superior to MR enterography in demonstrating mucosal abnormalities. The importance of detecting mucosal disease in patients without bowel obstruction has diminished in the era of capsule endoscopy. Patient acceptance, which favours MR enterography over MR enteroclysis, also must be considered, because many patients need multiple examinations.

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17
Q
  1. A 56-year-old woman shows an 8-cm solid enhancing mass in the left kidney with a central area of low attenuation on contrast-enhanced CT scan. US study performed earlier showed a large heterogeneous solid mass in the left kidney with a central stellate hypoechoic area. The most likely diagnosis based on the imaging finding would be

A. Renal cell carcinoma

B. Clear cell carcinoma

C. Rhabdomyoma

D. Adenoma

E. Oncocytoma

A
  1. E. Oncocytoma

Oncocytomas are tubular adenomas with a specific histological appearance. They were previously considered benign but have now been recognised to metastasise. They vary from 1 to 20 cm in diameter and tend to be large. They are usually solitary and unilateral. US shows a solid mass with internal echoes, which occasionally have a stellate hypoechoic centre. CECT demonstrates a well-defined solid mass, with a low-attenuation central scar, when large. Large lesions can extend into and engulf perinephric fat. RCC and oncocytoma look similar on MRI.

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18
Q
  1. A 40-year-old man presents with shortness of breath. Chest X-ray shows a diffuse bilateral reticulonodular pattern within the middle and upper zones. There are multiple small cysts in keeping with honeycomb lung. The lung volumes are preserved. What is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Langerhans cell histiocytosis

B. Lymphangiomyomatosis

C. Centrilobular emphysema

D. Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis

E. Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis

A
  1. A. Langerhans cell histiocytosis

Pulmonary LCH is a smoking-related lung disease. Peribronchiolar nodules are found; they may subsequently cavitate and form thick- and thin-walled cysts. Frequently, both nodules and cysts are seen. Cysts may be round but are often irregular, clover-leaf or bizarre shapes. Irregular cysts, cysts with nodules and upper zone predominance with sparing of the costophrenic angles are features that distinguish LCH from lymphangioleiomyomatosis.
Centrilobular emphysema represents the permanent destruction of bronchiolar walls with resultant enlargement of the airspaces distal to the terminal bronchiole. The distinguishing features of centrilobular emphysema include the lack of a perceptible cyst wall and the central location of the vascular structures (central dot sign).

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19
Q
  1. A 25-year old man with headache shows a heterogeneous mass on T2W MRI, in the fourth ventricle. No contrast enhancement is evident, but closer inspection reveals subarachnoid fat droplets in the ambient cisterns and a fat fluid level in the ventricles. What is the diagnosis?

A. Epidermoid cyst

B. Uncomplicated dermoid cyst

C. Ruptured dermoid cyst

D. Arachnoid cyst

E. Infected arachnoid cyst

A
  1. C. Ruptured dermoid cyst

Dermoid cysts are congenital ectodermal inclusion cysts. They tend to occur in the midline sellar, parasellar, or frontonasal regions or in the posterior fossa, where they occur either as vermian lesions or within the fourth ventricle.
Imaging findings vary, depending on whether the cyst has ruptured. Unruptured cysts have the same imaging characteristics as fat because they contain liquid cholesterol. All are hyperintense on T1-weighted images and do not enhance. The masses have heterogeneous signal intensity on T2-weighted images and vary from hypo- to hyperintense. The best diagnostic clue of a ruptured dermoid cyst is fatlike droplets in the subarachnoid cisterns, sulci and ventricles. Extensive pial enhancement can be seen from chemical meningitis caused by ruptured cysts.
Dermoid cysts may be confused with an epidermoid cyst, craniopharyngioma, teratoma or lipoma. Epidermoid cysts typically resemble CSF (not fat), lack dermal appendages, and are usually located off-midline. Like dermoid cysts, craniopharyngiomas are suprasellar, with a midline location, and demonstrate nodular calcification. However, most craniopharyngiomas are strikingly hyperintense on T2-weighted images and enhance strongly. Teratomas may also have a similar location but usually occur in the pineal region. Lipomas demonstrate homogeneous fat attenuation and/or signal intensity and show a chemical shift artefact, which typically does not occur with dermoid cysts.

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20
Q
  1. An 11 day- old child presents with duct-dependant cyanosis and congestive cardiac failure. Chest X-ray shows an enlarged heart with a figure of eight pattern and prominent veins. What is the likely diagnosis?

A. Transposition of the great vessels (TGA)

B. Truncus arteriosus

C. Tetralogy of Fallot

D. Vein of Galen aneurysm

E. Total anomalous pulmonary venous return (TAPVR)

A
  1. E. Total anomalous pulmonary venous return (TAPVR)

TAPVR occurs when the pulmonary veins fail to drain into the left atrium and instead form an aberrant connection with some other cardiovascular structure.
On chest radiographs, this cardiovascular anomaly resembles a snowman (figure of eight appearance). In infants affected by TAPVR, cyanosis and congestive heart failure typically develop in the early neonatal period.
TA, TGA typically does not present with heart failure. Vein of Galen aneurysm presents with features of heart failure on a chest X-ray but without any specific pattern.

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21
Q
  1. A 27-year-old man is complaining of central umbilical pain, which has gradually settled in the right iliac fossa with local guarding and rebound tenderness suggesting local peritonitis. Clinical features suggest acute appendicitis; however, an apparent mass is felt in the right iliac fossa, which prompts a CT scan.
    Which one of the following CT findings has the highest specificity and sensitivity for perforated appendicitis?

A. Free intra-abdominal fluid

B. Enlarged periappendiceal lymph nodes

C. Periappendiceal abscess

D. Periappendiceal fluid

E. Focal appendiceal wall enhancement defect

A
  1. E. Focal appendiceal wall enhancement defect

Defect in enhancing appendiceal wall has the highest specificity (100%) and sensitivity (64.3%) for indicating perforated appendicitis.

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22
Q
  1. A 22-year-old man involved in an RTA is admitted to ITU with multi-organ injury in an obtunded state. Initial CT is thought to be normal and an MRI is organised. Limited sequence MR scan reveals several round foci of low Tl, high T2 signal change bilaterally at the grey-white interface with further areas in the splenium of the corpus callosum. What is the diagnosis?

A. Multiple sclerosis

B. Vasculitis

C. Diffuse axonal injury

D. Infection

E. Neurosarcoid

A
  1. C. Diffuse axonal injury

Diffuse axonal injury (DAI) is a type of brain damage that is secondary’ to rotational acceleration/deceleration. MR can identify DAI lesions, whereas CT scan often fails to do so. T2-weighted images show high signal with blooming artefact. SWI (or GRE) sequences, exquisitely sensitive to blood products, may demonstrate small regions of susceptibility artefact at the grey-white matter junction, in the corpus callosum or the brain stem.
DAI is classified into three stages: the involvement of the grey-white matter junction indicates Stage I; corpus callosum involvement, particularly the splenium, indicates Stage II; and brainstem involvement indicates Stage III. Clinical studies demonstrate that the prognosis becomes poorer as deeper structures are involved.

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23
Q
  1. A 42 year old woman with hereditary non-polyposis colon cancer syndrome (HNPCC) shows a suspicious filling defect in the left renal pelvis on IVU, which is subsequently confirmed on CT urography. She is currently being investigated for haematuria and left loin pain. What is the most likely diagnosis, given her genetic background?

A. Renal lymphoma

B. TCC of the renal pelvis

C. Squamous cell cancer of the renal pelvis

D. Renal metastasis

E. Endometriosis

A
  1. B. TCC of the renal pelvis

Hereditary non-polyposis colon cancer syndrome (HNPCC) is an autosomal dominant condition that is associated with a high incidence of tumours of the renal pelvis, colorectal cancer, and tumours of the ovaries and small bowel. Squamous cell carcinoma of the renal pelvis is rare and is a highly aggressive tumour with a poor prognosis. Chronic infection and calculi play an important aetiological role in this malignancy, and stones are present in 57% of patients.
Renal lymphomas typically demonstrate sheet-like diffuse infiltration of the perirenal tissues or multiple low-attenuation focal lesions. Renal metastases are usually small (<3 cm), multiple and confined to the cortex. They are associated with metastases elsewhere, are of low attenuation, do not calcify, and do not invade the renal vein; they are also more infiltrative than exophytic compared to renal cell carcinoma.

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24
Q
  1. A 15-year-old boy with haemophilia presents to his GP with progressive worsening of right knee pain. Plain films exclude the presence of a fracture. AD of the following are features of haemophilic arthropathy affecting the knee, except

A. Epiphyseal enlargement

B. Widened intercondylar notch

C. Squared patella

D. Flattening of femoral condyles

E. Erlenmeyer flask deformity

A
  1. E. Erlenmeyer flask deformity

Erlenmeyer flask deformity is associated with thalassaemia.
Non specific findings of haemophilic arthropathy include joint effusion and periarticular osteopaenia from hyperaemia. Classical features include epiphyseal enlargement with associated gracile diaphysis (differentials are juvenile rheumatoid arthritis). Secondary degenerative disease with symmetrical loss of joint cartilage involving all compartments equally with periarticular erosions, subchondral cysts, osteophytes and sclerosis is seen in end-stage arthropathy.
Specific findings at the knee include widened intercondylar notch, squared margins of the patella, expanded femoral condyles and flattened surface of femoral condyles.

Specific findings at the elbow include enlargement of the radial head and widening of the trochlear notch.

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25
Q
  1. AD of the following are true of herpes simplex encephalitis, except

A. It mostly affects the limbic system.

B. CT may be negative in the first few days.

C. There is a tendency for haemorrhage.

D. Increased signal is seen on T2W images in the temporal lobe.

E. DWI shows low signal in the affected area.

A
  1. E. DWI shows low signal in the affected area.

In the immunocompetent adult patient, the pattern is quite typical and manifests as a bilateral asymmetrical involvement of the limbic system, medial temporal lobes, insular cortices and inferolateral frontal lobes. The basal ganglia are typically spared. Extralimbic involvement is more prevalent in children than in adults, seen most commonly in the parietal lobe, with sparing of the basal ganglia. Eventually, it results in marked cystic encephalomalacia and volume loss in affected areas.
In immunocompromised patients, involvement can be more diffuse and is more likely to involve the brainstem. Early diagnosis is difficult and a ‘normal’ CT is often seen. Affected areas appear low on T1-weighted MRI due to oedema. High T1 signal suggests areas of haemorrhage. Post-contrast enhancement is usually late and can be gyral, leptomeningeal, ring or diffuse enhancement. Affected white matter and cortex appears high signal on T2-weighted and FLAIR images. Areas of haemorrhage show low T2 signal and blooming artefact. DWI is more sensitive than T2-weighted images. Cytotoxic oedema is seen as high signal on DWI with corresponding low signal on ADC map. Vasogenic oedema is bright on both (T2 shine-through).

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26
Q
  1. CXR demonstrates a mediastinal mass. The heart borders are not obscured and the hilar vessels are visible. Which of the following is in keeping with the CXR findings?

A. Lymphoma

B. Teratoma

C. Retrosternal goiter

D. Nerve sheath tumour

E. Left ventricular aneurysm

A
  1. D. Nerve sheath tumour

Anatomical and radiological division of the mediastinum into anterior, middle and posterior varies. Anatomically, structures in the pericardial space including great vessels constitute the middle mediastinum; structures anterior to the pericardial sac constitute the anterior mediastinum, and structures behind the sac constitute the posterior mediastinum. The Felson method of radiological division is based on lateral chest radiography. A line extending from the diaphragm to the thoracic inlet along the back of the heart and anterior to the trachea separates the anterior and middle mediastinum, whereas a line that connects points 1 cm behind the anterior margins of the vertebral bodies separates the middle and posterior mediastinal compartments.
The hilum overlay sign is present when the normal hilar structures project through a mass, meaning that the mass is either anterior or posterior to the hilum. Loss of anterior junction line and cardiac contours would suggest anterior location; preservation of these lines and the loss or widening of the posterior junction lines, paraspinal lines, would suggest posterior location.
Lymphoma, teratoma and goitre are anterior mediastinal masses. Nerve sheath tumours arc the only true posterior mediastinal structures amongst the examples.

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27
Q
  1. A previously well 29 year-old presents with inversion injury. An X-ray demonstrates no fracture. However, there is a well-circumscribed lesion in the tibia with a ground-glass matrix and a narrow zone of transition. There is no periosteal reaction or associated soft-tissue mass. Which of the following is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Polyostotic fibrous dysplasia

B. Osteosarcoma

C. Osteoid osteoma

D. Adamantinoma

E. Monostotic fibrous dysplasia

A
  1. E. Monostotic fibrous dysplasia

Fibrous dysplasia is an uncommon, benign disorder characterised by a tumour-like proliferation of fibro-osseous tissue. It may either present as monostotic (affecting one bone) or polyostotic (affecting many bones). Fibrous dysplasia is usually found in the proximal femur.
tibia, humerus, ribs and craniofacial bones in decreasing order of incidence. Polyostotic cases can affect multiple adjacent bones or multiple extremities. Men and women are equally affected by the disorder.
Fibrous dysplasia is usually asymptomatic, although pain and swelling may accompany the lesion. Radiographically, fibrous dysplasia appears as a well-circumscribed lesion in a long bone with a ground-glass or hazy appearance of the matrix. There is a narrow zone of transition and no periosteal reaction or soft-tissue mass. The lesions are normally located in the metaphysis or diaphysis. There is sometimes focal thinning of the overlying cortex, called ‘scalloping from within’. The radiological appearance can also be cystic, pagetoid, or dense and sclerotic. Repeated fractures through lesions in the proximal femur can result in the formation of a so-called shepherd’s crook deformity. The Tc-99m bone scan uptake may be normal or increased. Bone scans are not helpful in diagnosing these lesions but can be useful in identifying asymptomatic lesions. MR! or CT scans can be helpful in delineating the extent of the lesion and identifying possible pathological fractures. Sarcomatous change within the lesion can be identified by MRI or CT.

28
Q
  1. Barium swallow shows anterior indentation of the oesophagus and posterior indentation of the trachea. The cause for this is

A. Aberrant right subclavian artery

B. Double aortic arch

C. Right-sided aortic arch

D. Aberrant left pulmonary artery

E. Aberrant left subclavian artery

A
  1. D. Aberrant left pulmonary artery

Vascular anomalies of the aortic arch and the pulmonary artery can cause vascular impression on the barium-filled oesophagus. The most common is a right-sided aortic arch, which results in an indentation on the right and absence of normal aortic impression on the left. Bilateral indentation is caused by a double aortic arch; the right arch is normally higher and larger than the left.
Aberrant right subclavian artery from a normal arch or an aberrant left subclavian artery from a right-sided arch traverses behind the oesophagus as it crosses the mediastinum and results in a posterior impression on the oesophagus seen on a lateral view. An aberrant left pulmonary artery traverses between the trachea and oesophagus above the carina, resulting in a posterior indentation on the trachea and an anterior indentation on the oesophagus on lateral view. Coarctation of the aorta results in a reverse-3 impression on the left of the oesophagus on an AP image. Type-3 anomalous pulmonary veins traverse the diaphragm with the oesophagus and drain into a systemic vein, causing an impression on the anterior wall of the oesophagus, low down close to the diaphragm.

29
Q
  1. A 34-year old woman has been complaining of acute right upper-quadrant pain for the last 2 days. Her inflammatory markers are raised and she looks unwell. She is known to have gallstones from a previous US study. All of the following are MR findings consistent with the diagnosis of acute cholecystitis, except

A. Gallbladder wall thickening greater than 3 mm

B. Gallbladder wall oedema

C. Contracted gallbladder

D. Pericholecystic fluid

E. Echogenic bile

A
  1. C. Contracted gallbladder

Features of acute cholecystitis include thickened GB wall >4-5 mm, echogenic bile/sludge, gallbladder distention, pericholecystic fluid in the absence of ascites and subserosal oedema. Contracted GB is generally a feature of chronic cholecystitis.

30
Q
  1. A 65-year-old man with three months’ history of painless haematuria was diagnosed as having a primary bladder cancer on cystoscopy. An MRI of the pelvis is scheduled for staging. With regard to MRI for staging of bladder cancer, which of the following is incorrect?

A. Papillary tumour is best seen on T1W images.

B. Infiltrating component is better assessed with post-contrast T1W than T2W images.

C. Endorectal coil improves visualisation of bladder wall layers.

D. T2W helps in differentiating T2b and T3 tumours.

E. Involved seminal vesicles show high signal on T2W images.

A
  1. E. Involved seminal vesicles show a high signal on T2W images.

MR tumour staging criteria follow the TNM system. A papillary tumour is best seen on T1-weighted images, where it is seen as higher signal than the urine. It appears similar in signal intensity on T2-weighted sequences. Tumour demonstration (especially a small one) is facilitated by use of contrast. To evaluate infiltration, T2-weighted or post-contrast T1-weighted sequences are required. Use of surface coils (endorectal coils) improves visualisation of layers of the bladder wall, improving staging of T2-T3b tumours. Visualisation of low intensity bladder wall on T2-weighted sequence between the tumour and perivesical fat helps in differentiating a T2b tumour from a T3 tumour. Disruption of low-signal bladder wall, perivesical fat stranding and irregularity of the outer bladder wall suggests T3b disease. Dynamic contrast induced MRI improves bladder cancer staging accuracy by helping differentiation of tumour (enhances earlier) from inflammatory post-biopsy changes in the bladder wall or perivesical fat (slower rate of enhancement). It is also useful in staging nodes, because abnormal nodes (normal or abnormal by size) enhance earlier than non-metastatic lymph nodes.
Involvement of the seminal vesicle is evident as an increase in size of the vesicle, reduced T2 signal, and obliteration of the angle between the seminal vesicle and posterior bladder wall. In contrast, invasion of the prostate and rectum is seen as direct tumour extension and an increase in signal intensity on T2-weighted images.
T staging of bladder tumours
Ta: Non-invasive papillary tumour Tis: In situ (non-invasive flat)
T1: Through lamina propria into subepithelial connective tissues
T2a: Only invades the inner half of the muscle
T2b: Invades into the outer half of the muscle
T3a: Microscopic extravesical invasion
T3b: Macroscopic extravesical invasion
T4: Direct invasion into adjacent structures (prostate, uterus, vaginal vault)
T4b: Direct involvement of pelvic side wall and/or abdominal wall

31
Q
  1. All of the following are associated with multiple focal hyper intensities in both cerebral hemispheres, except

A. CADASIL

B. ADEM

C. MS

D. Epidermoid

E. Sarcoidosis

A
  1. D. Epidermoid

Causes of white matter hyperintensities are protean; however certain categories are recognised. These include the following:
Hypoxic/ischaemic aetiology secondary to hereditary conditions (Fabry’s disease, PKU, MELAS, amyloid deposition, CADASII., moyamoya, Rendu-Weber-Osler syndrome, etc.) or acquired conditions (hypertension, hypotension, atherosclerosis, NPH, embolic events, Wallerian degeneration, etc.).
Inflammatory conditions like MS and its variants, ADEM, SSPE, vasculitis (Behcet’s disease, GCA, PAN, etc.), sarcoid, bacterial, protozoal, viral (HSV, HIV, PML), spirochetal (Lyme disease) and fungal.
Toxic or metabolic causes like CPM, CO intoxication, methotrexate treatment, Marchiafava- Bignami syndrome and B12 deficiency. Other conditions include radiation, contusion, hystiocytosis and Erdheim-Chester disease.
Epidermoid cysts are extraparenchymal, mimic CSF, do not enhance and show restricted diffusion.

32
Q
  1. A 30-year-old man recently treated with bone marrow’ transplant for acute myeloid leukaemia 12 weeks ago presents with cough and fever. HRCT demonstrates multiple micronodules with areas of consolidation and ground glass attenuation. What is
    the likeliest diagnosis?

A. Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia

B. Cytomegalovirus pneumonitis

C. Drug toxicity

D. Acute rejection

E. Graft versus host disease

A
  1. B. Cytomegalovirus pneumonitis

Early complications include interstitial pneumonitis (infective and non-infective types), infection, oedema, haemorrhage, thromboembolism and calcification. COP is a rare complication that may occur early or late. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most important viral pathogen that causes pneumonia in transplant recipients. RSV, HHV6, pneumocystis jiroveci and adenovirus are less common. Idiopathic interstitial pneumonia has various causes including acute graft-versus- host disease.
Unfortunately, CT appearances of both infectious and non-infectious interstitial pneumonitis are non-specific. Notable features include increased interstitial markings, multilobar infiltrates, areas of ground-glass opacity and nodules. Biopsy is frequently undertaken to identify the cause.

33
Q
  1. A 49-year-old man patient previously fit and well has been admitted with acute epigastric pain and raised amylase. A diagnosis of pancreatitis is made. What is the most appropriate imaging examination for assessment of acute pancreatitis?

A. Abdominal radiography

B. Ultrasound

C. Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP)

D. Contrast-enhanced CT

E. EUS

A
  1. D. Contrast-enhanced CT

Contrast-enhanced CT is the imaging modality of choice for the diagnosis and staging of acute pancreatitis. The pancreas enhances uniformly in mild acute pancreatitis and may be normal or enlarged with a variable amount of increased attenuation in the adjacent fat, termed ‘stranding’. Local oedema is a common finding and may extend along the mesentery, mesocolon and hepatoduodenal ligament and into the peritoneal spaces. Extension of oedematous fluid into the anterior perirenal space may create a mass effect and a halo sign with sparing of the perinephric fat.
Abnormal ultrasound findings are seen in 33%-90% of patients with acute pancreatitis. Interstitial oedema in acute pancreatitis is depicted on ultrasound as an enlarged hypoechoic gland. Although ultrasound may be used to identify peripancreatic acute fluid collections, it is not useful for the detection of necrosis. Thus its main role in the imaging of acute pancreatitis is limited to the detection of cholelithiasis and choledocholithiasis and identification of fluid collections in the peritoneum, retroperitoneum and pleural spaces.

34
Q
  1. A 53-year-old woman with facial pain shows a tabulated, homogenous CSF density mass in the left CP angle on CT. No contrast enhancement is evident and the differentials considered are either an arachnoid cyst or an epidermoid cyst. Which of the following investigations will you consider to confirm your diagnosis?

A. MR angiogram of the circle of Willis

B. Diffusion-weighted MRI

C. PET CT

D. Post-gadolinium MR brain

E. MR spectroscopy

A
  1. B. Diffusion-weighted MR imaging

Epidermoid cysts are characteristically well demarcated and have a homogeneous low density, similar to CSF on CT scan, showing no contrast enhancement. On MRI, epidermoid cysts are hypointense on T1-weighted images and hyperintense on T2-weighted images. On FLAIR, epidermoid cysts become hyperintense or appear more heterogeneous compared to an arachnoid cyst. There are occasions when an epidermoid may appear as a low-intensity lesion on FLAIR. However, on diffusion-weighted imaging, epidermoid cysts show restriction and remain bright (due to a combination of true restricted diffusion and T2 shine-through). The latter helps with definitive differentiation of an epidermoid cyst from an arachnoid cyst.

35
Q
  1. A 15-year-old girl presents with acute pelvic pain. Beta-human chorionic gonadotrophin (p-hCG) is normal. US demonstrates a thin walled 5 cm echogenic adnexal mass with posterior acoustic enhancement. There is no colour internal Doppler signal. Follow-up imaging after 3 months fails to demonstrate the mass. What is the most likely cause?

A. Appendix abscess

B. Haemorrhagic ovarian cyst

C. Ovarian dermoid

D. Ectopic pregnancy

E. Ovarian torsion

A
  1. B. Haemorrhagic ovarian cyst

All of the above may present as a right hemipelvic mass. Haemorrhage into an ovarian follicular cyst is the most common of these, and it usually resolves after one or two menstrual cycles. Several patterns of ultrasound findings have been described, including an echogenic mass, a ground glass pattern (diffuse low-level echoes), a whirled pattern of mixed echogenicity and a ‘fishnet weave’ pattern (fine septations or reticular echoes). Appendix abscess would be thick-walled. Ovarian dermoid may present as an echogenic mass, although acoustic shadowing would be more typical owing to internal calcifications and would not resolve in this fashion. Ectopic pregnancy may present as an echogenic ‘tubal mass’, although elevated β-hCG would be a feature. Ovarian torsion may appear as an enlarged echogenic ovary (owing to oedema) and, like haemorrhagic cyst, often lacks internal colour Doppler flow, although it is less common than haemorrhagic cyst. It would also necessitate urgent surgery rather than follow up imaging.

36
Q
  1. A truck driver has been involved in an RTA. He has sustained head injuries and lower limb fractures. A CT performed 3 hours after injury shows small patches of consolidation within the posterior aspect of the lungs. What are these most likely to represent?

A. Fat embolism

B. Pulmonary contusion

C. ARDS

D. Traumatic lung cysts

E. Pulmonary embolism

A
  1. B. Pulmonary contusion

Lung contusion is the most common type of lung injury in blunt chest trauma. It occurs at the time of injury, but it may be undetectable on chest radiography for the first 6 hours after trauma; however, CT may show it immediately. The pooling of haemorrhage and oedema will blossom at 24 hours, rendering the contusion more evident. The appearance of consolidation on CXR after the first 24 hours should raise the suspicion of other pathological conditions such as aspiration, pneumonia and fat embolism. Clearance of an uncomplicated contusion begins at 24 48 hours with complete resolution after 3-14 days. Lack of resolution within the expected time frame should raise the suspicion of complications such as pneumonia, abscess or ARDS.
Lung laceration results in ground-glass change or consolidation with pneumatocoele, haematocele or pneumothorax. Rib fractures may be associated with peripheral lacerations.

37
Q
  1. A 27-year-old woman who is 26 weeks pregnant has been complaining of lower abdominal pain, which has gradually settled in the right iliac fossa. On surgical review, she is suspected to have acute appendicitis. An MRI of the abdomen is organised. All of the following features are expected features of acute appendicitis on MRI, except

A. Calibre of greater than 7 mm

B. Thick wall (>2 mm)

C. High-signal-intensity luminal contents

D. Periappendiceal fat stranding

E. Low luminal signal intensity on T1 and T2-weighted images.

A
  1. E. Low luminal signal intensity on Tl- and T2-weighted images

MR imaging features of a normal appendix include a diameter less than 6 mm, an appendiceal wall thickness less than 2 mm, low luminal signal intensity on Tl - and T2-weighted images and no periappendiceal fat stranding or fluid. MRI features of appendicitis include an appendiceal diameter greater than 7 mm, an appendiceal wall thickness greater than 2 mm, high-signal- intensity luminal contents on T2-weighted images due to fluid or oedema and hyperintense periappendiceal fat stranding and fluid.
An appendix with high-signal-intensity luminal contents on T2-weighted images and a diameter between 6 and 7 mm without associated wall thickening or periappendiceal fat stranding or fluid is considered indeterminate for appendicitis and warrants close clinical follow-up. MRI has been described as an effective modality for the diagnosis of appendicitis during pregnancy, with 100% sensitivity and 94% specificity reported.

38
Q
  1. An 8-year-old girl is admitted with sudden onset acute pelvic pain, and ovarian torsion is suspected. Which of the following statements regarding ovarian torsion is least accurate?

A. Benign cystic teratoma is the most common neoplastic cause.

B. It most commonly occurs on the left.

C. The ‘whirlpool sign’ is a feature on ultrasound.

D. The most common finding is asymmetric ovarian volumes.

E. An urgent referral to gynaecology should be made.

A
  1. B. It most commonly occurs on the left.

Ovarian torsion is most common in prepubertal girls and may be caused by ovarian enlargement (for example owing to neoplastic causes, of which benign cystic teratoma is the most common) or abnormally increased adnexal mobility. It is more common on the right than the left, which is postulated to occur because of a protective effect of the sigmoid colon on the left side. On ultrasound, the most reliable positive finding is asymmetry between the volumes of the right and left ovaries. Arterial Doppler waveform is usually but not always absent, as there is blood supply from both the ovarian and uterine arteries.
A whirlpool sign may be seen because of twisting of the ovarian pedicle. Treatment is with emergency surgery; hence immediate referral to gynaecology is required.

39
Q
  1. MRI brain on a patient with head injury shows a 3 x 3 cm haematoma in the right occipital lobe, which retuns high signals on both T1W and T2W images. What is the phase of the intracerebral haematoma?

A. Hyperacute

B. Acute

C. Early subacute

D. Late subacute

E. Chronic

A
  1. D. Late subacute
40
Q
  1. A 3-month-old infant with abdominal distension is seen to have enlarged adrenal glands on ultrasound along with hepatosplenomegaly. CT confirms the enlarged liver and spleen and demonstrates bilateral enlarged adrenal glands, which are of normal triangular morphology but contain widespread punctate calcification. What is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Bilateral neuroblastomas

B. Non traumatic adrenal haemorrhage

C. Wolman disease

D. Adrenocortical hyperplasia

E. Bilateral adrenocortical carcinoma

A
  1. C. Wolman disease

Wolman disease is an uncommon autosomal recessive disorder characterised by accumulation of fat within such tissues as the liver, spleen, lymph nodes and adrenal glands. Accordingly, these tissues will increase in size. The adrenal findings are diagnostic of the condition, with glands that are of normal shape but increased size, with diffuse punctate calcification throughout both glands. It is usually fatal by the age of 6 months. Neuroblastomas may be seen in both adrenal glands simultaneously and are often calcified, although they will usually be large irregular masses. Non-traumatic haemorrhage of both adrenals may be seen, often caused by perinatal stressors, although this also takes the form of a mass and calcification is usually peripheral (initially) or dense (chronic stage). Adrenal glands may be thickened in adrenocortical hyperplasia but calcification is not a typical feature. Adrenocortical carcinoma is typically unilateral and is not usually seen until after the age of 6 months.

41
Q
  1. A 3-year-old boy presenting with gross haematuria is found to have a renal mass on ultrasound, thought to represent a Wilms tumour. Which of the following statements regarding Wilms tumour is inaccurate?

A. Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome is a recognised association.

B. The majority present with an asymptomatic palpable mass.

C. Horseshoe kidney is a recognised association.

D. Stage IV disease refers to bilateral renal involvement at diagnosis.

E. Nephroblastomatosis is a recognised precursor.

A
  1. D. Stage IV disease refers to bilateral renal involvement at diagnosis.

Wilms tumour has multiple associations. One-third of patients with sporadic aniridia develop Wilms tumour; it also occurs in up to 20% of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome sufferers (otherwise known as EMG syndrome - exomphalos, macroglossia, gigantism with hepatomegaly also a feature). Other associations include hemihypertrophy and a variety of genitourinary disorders including Drash syndrome, renal anomalies (including horseshoe kidney) and genital anomalies. Nephroblastomatosis is a recognised precursor and is seen in 99% of cases of bilateral Wilms tumour. Presentation of Wilms tumour is most commonly as an asymptomatic palpable abdominal mass, although other presentations include hypertension, pain and fever. Stage IV disease refers to the presence of haematogenous or extra-abdominopelvic lymph nodes.

42
Q
  1. A 60-year old man has a CXR, which shows a peripheral opacity forming an obtuse angle with the pleura. A CXR prior to attending clinic taken with different inspiration shows a slight change in position and shape of this lesion. A wrist X-ray performed previously following trauma showed periosteal reaction in the radius and ulna. What is the likeliest cause for the above presentation?

A. Mesothelioma

B. Primary lung cancer

C. Pleural fibroma

D. Pleural lipoma

E. Asbestosis

A
  1. C. Pleural fibroma

Chest radiographs of patients with pleural fibroma typically demonstrate a well-defined, lobular, solitary nodule or mass, which may appear to be in the lung periphery and typically abuts a pleural surface or is located within a fissure. Pedunculated tumours may show mobility within the pleural space or changes in shape and orientation on fluoroscopy or with changes in the patient’s position.
Hypertrophic osteoarthropathy is characterised by periosteal reaction without an underlying bone lesion; causes include bronchogenic carcinoma (squamous cell cancer being the most common), pulmonary lymphoma, lung abscess, bronchiectasis, pulmonary metastases, pleural fibroma and mesothelioma.

43
Q
  1. A 36-year-old man notices a hard, non-tender lump in his right testes. He cannot convincingly recollect a history of recent or past trauma to the scrotum. US reveals a well defined, hyporcflcctivc homogenous mass without internal calcification or cystic spaces in the right testes. What is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Seminoma

B. Teratoma

C. Sertoli cell tumour

D. Lymphoma

E. Embryonal cell tumour

A
  1. A. Seminoma

Seminoma is the most common pure germ cell tumour. The imaging characteristics of seminomas reflect their uniform cellular nature. On US images, these tumours arc generally uniformly hypoechoic. Embryonal carcinoma is the second most common histologic type of testicular tumour after seminoma. The tunica albuginea may be invaded, and the borders of the tumour are less distinct, as expected; they are more heterogeneous and ill-defined than seminomas on US image. Yolk sac tumours account for 80% of childhood testicular tumours, with most cases occurring before the age of 2 years. Imaging findings are non-specific, especially in children, in whom the only finding may be testicular enlargement without a defined mass. After yolk sac tumour, teratoma is the second most common testicular tumour in children. The complex nature of teratoma is reflected in its sonographic appearance. Teratomas generally form well circumscribed complex masses. Cysts are a common feature and may be anechoic or complex, depending on the cyst contents (i.e., serous, mucoid or keratinous fluid). Cartilage, calcification, fibrosis and scar formation result in echogenic foci that may or may not produce posterior acoustic shadow. Testicular tumours from the sex cords (Sertoli cells) and interstitial stroma (Leydig ceils) constitute 4% of tumours. Their sonographic appearance is variable and is indistinguishable from that of germ cell tumours. Sertoli cell tumours are typically well-circumscribed, unilateral, round to lobulated masses. The sonographic appearance of testicular lymphoma is variable and indistinguishable from that of germ cell tumours.
Testicular lymphoma generally appears as discrete hypoechoic lesions, which may completely infiltrate the testicle.

44
Q
  1. A 76-year-old man with progressive hind- and midfoot pain is referred to the radiology department for a plain film of his foot. Advanced neuropathic type arthropathy involving the mid-tarsal joints of the foot is noted. All of the following are acquired peripheral causes of neuropathic osteoarthropathy, except

A. Diabetes mellitus

B. Leprosy

C. Syringomyelia

D. Repeated intra-articular corticosteroid injections

E. Peripheral nerve injury

A
  1. C. Syringomyelia

Neuropathic osteoarthropathy can be categorised as originating from a congenital or acquired cause. The acquired causes include a central origin (e.g., syringomyelia, spinal cord tumours and multiple sclerosis) or a peripheral origin (e.g., poliomyelitis, leprosy, diabetes mellitus and peripheral nerve injury).

45
Q
  1. Following a motorcycle accident a patient notices wasting of the small muscles of his left hand. Neurologist diagnoses brachial plexus injury and arranges a MRI to determine whether
    it is preganglionic or postganglionic. Which of the following findings would suggest a preganglionic brachial plexus injury?

A. Pseudomeningocele

B. Thickened nerves

C. Increased T2 signal in the peripheral nerve

D. Discontinuity of the peripheral nerve with distal nerve contraction

E. Direct compression of the brachial plexus by haematoma

A
  1. A. Pseudomeningocele

The prognosis is better in postganglionic injuries, where surgical repair in the form of nerve grafting is possible. In preganglionic injuries, usually nerve root avulsions, direct surgical repair cannot be performed. A MRI scan of postganglionic injuries can show thickened nerves with a low signal intensity on T1-weighted images and an increased signal intensity on T2-weighted images. Nerve may be in contiguity, or there can be discontinuity with distal nerve contraction. Direct brachial plexus compression by a haematoma, fracture fragment or callus formation can also cause brachial plexopathy.

A MRI scan of preganglionic injuries can show nerve root avulsions with or without pseudomeningocele.

Pseudomeningoceles are cerebrospinal fluid collections resulting from a dural tear. The presence of a pseudomeningocele is a valuable sign. Spinal cord abnormalities occur in 20% of those with preganglionic injuries, such as oedema, haemorrhage and myelomalacia. An uncommon but useful finding is the enhancement of intradural nerve roots or root.

46
Q
  1. A 3-year-old girl presents with isosexual precocious puberty, gelastic seizures, and a soft-tissue density round mass at the region of the hypothalamus on MR brain. No contrast enhancement is evident and the lesion returns signal similar to grey matter on all sequences. What is the diagnosis?

A. Pituitary macroadenoma

B. Cyst of the Rathke’s pouch

C. Hamartoma of tuber cinereum

D. Meningioma

E. Aneurysm of ACA

A
  1. C. Hamartoma of tuber cinereum

Hypothalamic hamartomas are developmental malformations consisting of tumour-like masses located in the tuber cinereum of the hypothalamus. Most patients present in the first or second decade of life, with boys being more commonly affected than girls. These lesions have been divided into parahypothalamic hamartomas and intrahypothalamic hamartomas. Parahypothalamic hamartomas are pedunculated masses attached to the floor of the hypothalamus. These lesions seem more likely to be associated with precocious puberty than with gelastic seizures. Intrahypothalamic hamartomas are sessile masses with a broad attachment to the hypothalamus. They lie within the hypothalamus and may distort the contour of the third ventricle. In addition, they seem to be associated more often with gelastic seizures than with precocious puberty. At MR imaging, they are seen as well-defined pedunculated or sessile lesions at the tuber cinereum and are isointense or mildly hypointense on T1-weighted images and iso to hyperintense on T2-weighted images, with no contrast enhancement or calcification. The absence of any long-term change in the size, shape or signal intensity of the lesion strongly supports the diagnosis of hypothalamic hamartoma.

47
Q
  1. An 18-month-old child is suspected of having sustained non accidental head injury (NAHI). He has a CT scan on admission, which was normal but has ongoing focal neurology. Which one of the following is the most appropriate next step?

A. Repeat non-contrast CT of head

B. Repeat CT of head with contrast

C. MRI of cervical spine

D. MRI of head with T2* GE and DWI

E. MRI head with gadolinium

A
  1. D. MRI of head with T2* GE and DWI

When a child is admitted acutely with suspected NAHI, the primary neuroimaging performed on Day 1 is non-contrast CT of the brain. This has the advantage over MRI in the acute setting of being fast to acquire in a potentially unstable patient and is highly sensitive to hyperacute blood. The main aim at this stage is to diagnose/exclude any acute haemorrhage amenable to neurosurgical treatment.
If the child has ongoing neurological signs/symptoms or an abnormal initial CT brain, then an MRI should be performed. This is normally done at 3-5 days.
Contrast is not necessary but DWI - for ischaemia and T2* GE or similar sequence (for the detection of blood products) - should be considered. If there is abnormal imaging during the patient’s acute admission or persistent neurological signs or symptoms, then a repeat MRI brain at 3-6 months should be considered.
If the first presentation is non-acute, then MRI is the appropriate initial imaging modality.

48
Q
  1. A 53-year-old man with painful haematuria and left loin to groin pain progressing
    over the last 5 days has been scheduled for a CT urogram to look for a left ureteric calculus. Regarding CT evaluation of uretric calculi, all of the following are true, except

A. Indinavir stones arc often missed on CT.

B. Ureteric stones tend to lodge at PUJ, VUJ and where the ureter crosses the iliac vessels.

C. Periureteric stranding is a secondary sign of ureteric obstruction.

D. Stones less than 10 mm can pass spontaneously without intervention.

E. Comet tail sign is specific for distal ureteric calculus.

A
  1. E. Comet tail sign is specific for distal ureteric calculus.

Most textbooks of anatomy describe the ureter as having three anatomical narrowest points. These are the pelvi-ureteric junction (PUJ), the point where the ureter crosses anterior to the iliac vessels, and the uretero-vesical junction (UVJ); however, contrary to previous teaching there is debate whether these are the most common places for stones to be lodged. Indinavir stones have soft-tissue attenuation (15-30 HU) and are likely to be missed at unenhanced CT. However, renal colic in a patient receiving indinavir therapy for HIV infection, along with the presence of obstructive features at CT, usually helps clinch the diagnosis. The most reliable signs of ureteric obstruction include hydroureter, hydronephrosis, perinephric stranding, periureteral oedema, and unilateral renal enlargement. Stones less than 5 mm have a 68% chance of passing spontaneously, and stones between 5 and 10 mm have a 47% chance. The soft-tissue rim sign consists of a halo of soft-tissue attenuation around a calcific focus and is very specific for ureteric calculi. The comet tail sign is created by an eccentric tapering soft-tissue area adjacent to a phlebolith. These two signs are used to differentiate ureteric and pelvic calcification.

49
Q
  1. A middle aged woman presents to casualty with progressive increase in right hip pain and inability to weight-bear. Plain films performed in the A&E department reveal a stress fracture involving the neck of the femur, which accounts for her clinical state. However, there is no history of acute trauma. Which one of the following statements concerning fatigue and insufficiency fractures is true?

A. A fatigue fracture is due to abnormal stress on an abnormal bone.

B. A fatigue fracture is due to normal stress on a normal bone.

C. An insufficiency fracture is due to abnormal stress on a normal bone.

D. A fatigue fracture is due to abnormal stress on a normal bone.

E. The cause of these two fractures is essentially the same.

A
  1. D. A fatigue fracture is due to abnormal stress on a normal bone.

A fatigue fracture occurs from excessive and repeated stress on normal bone. An insufficiency fracture occurs from normal physiological stresses on abnormal bone. Both entities arc part of the larger group of fractures known as stress fractures, which is the term used to describe fractures occurring from a mismatch of bone strength and chronic mechanical stress.

50
Q
  1. All the following are true of Creutzfeldt Jacob disease, except

A. No contrast enhancement

B. No white matter involvement

C. Bilateral high T2 signal change in the caudate and putamen

D. Associated with dementia and myoclonus

E. Self limiting disease of good prognosis

A
  1. E. Self-limiting disease of good prognosis

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), a fatal neurodegenerative disorder, is diagnosed by the detection of an accumulation of an abnormal form of the human prion protein PrPSc in the brain. It is characterised by rapidly progressive dementia, cerebral atrophy, myoclonus and death.
The T2-weighted MRI of sCJD (sporadic CJD) patients often shows high signal in the head of the caudate nucleus and in the putamen as compared with the thalamus and the cerebral cortex.

Hyperintense signal changes can also occur in the thalamus, but in sCJD they are usually less prominent than those in the putamen or the caudate nucleus. In addition, there is high signal in the cerebral cortex in some cases. With the introduction of the new sequences FLAIR and DWI, these signal changes are more easily identified. Patients with the new variant of CJD (vCJD) show bilateral increased signal on MRI in the pulvinar thalami (relative to the grey matter of other basal ganglia and the cerebral cortex). There is currently no curative treatment and the disease is invariably fatal.

51
Q
  1. A 42-year-old woman with right upper abdominal pain and worsening LFTs is referred for an US. The scan shows heterogeneous echotexture to the liver without any definite focal lesions and no Doppler flow within the hepatic veins.
    A dual phase CT liver shows hepatomegaly and a hyperenhancement of the caudate lobe with hypoenhancement to the rest of the liver. Ascites is present. A diagnosis of Budd-Chiari syndrome is made. All of the following are predisposing factors, except

A. Pregnancy

B. Antiphospholipid syndrome

C. Alcohol abuse

D. Membranous web-like obstruction of HV or I VC

E. Tumour invasion of the hepatic veins

A
  1. C. Alcohol abuse

In approximately 75% of patients, a haematologic abnormality or a cause of thrombotic diathesis can be identified that predisposes the patient to the occurrence of Budd-Chiari syndrome.
The presence of multiple causes in the same patient has been reported. Haematologic diseases, especially myeloproliferative disorders, are the most common cause, and it has been suggested that patients with idiopathic Budd-Chiari syndrome may have an underlying myeloproliferative disorder. Causes of thrombotic diathesis that have been associated with Budd-Chiari syndrome include paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria, antiphospholipid syndrome, inherited deficiencies of proteins C and S and antithrombin III, factor V Leiden mutation, prothrombin gene mutation, methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase mutation, use of oral contraceptives, pregnancy and immediate post-partum status.
Metastatic invasion of the hepatic vein, I VC or right atrium and primary tumour occurrence in the kidney, liver, adrenal gland, I VC or heart are less frequent causes of Budd-Chiari syndrome. Membranous web like obstruction of the hepatic vein or JVC is a more prevalent cause of hepatic venous outflow obstruction in the Asian population. Membranous webs of the hepatic vein or IVC may be congenital or represent sequelae of thrombosis.

52
Q
  1. A 43 year old man with a known diagnosis of AIDS presents with headache, personality change and seizure. Unenhanced CT brain shows a 5 cm, slightly hyperdense lesion in the right frontal lobe with significant peritumoural oedema with little mass effect. Contrast-enhanced MRI brain shows an irregular ring-enhancing lesion in the corresponding location in a sea of oedema. What is your diagnosis?

A. Primary CNS lymphoma

B. Systemic NHL

C. PML

D. Toxoplasmosis

E. CMV encephalitis

A
  1. A. Primary CNS lymphoma

Toxoplasmosis typically manifests on CT scans and MRIs as nodular (small encephalitis) and/or ring-enhancing (large abscess) lesions within the brain parenchyma. The enhancing ring, when present, may be somewhat thicker and more ill-defined than that seen in association with a typical bacterial abscess.
The lesions are associated with surrounding oedema and tend to be multiple at presentation. However, a significant percentage of patients present with solitary lesions. Toxoplasmic lesions are most often seen in the basal ganglia and cerebral hemispheres. On non enhanced T1 -weighted MR images, the lesions are of low signal intensity. On T2-weighted MR images, the lesions are mildly to moderately hyperintense in relation to the brain parenchyma and can be difficult to separate from the surrounding oedema. The presence of small haemorrhages may be a sign of toxoplasmosis, and calcifications can occasionally be seen in treated lesions.
On CT scans and MR images, lymphoma most commonly manifests as an enhancing, space occupying mass with surrounding oedema. However, much of the time the lesions undergo central necrosis and present as ring-enhancing masses; on non-contrast enhanced T1-weighted images, typical lesions are isointense in relation to brain parenchyma, whereas on T2-weighted images the lesions are isointense to hyperintense. On non enhanced CT, a small percentage of the lesions are of increased attenuation with respect to the brain parenchyma (as is commonly observed in cases of primary CNS lymphoma in patients who do not have AIDS).
The imaging characteristics of lymphoma and toxoplasmosis overlap to such a significant degree that it is nearly impossible to differentiate the lesions on the basis of their appearance on CT scans or MR images alone. Patients with a few solid lesions or ring enhancing subependymal or periventricular lesions (particularly those with subependymal extension) tend to have lymphomas, whereas patients with multiple ring-enhancing lesions (particularly those that are haemorrhagic) in the basal ganglia and cerebral hemispheres are more likely to have toxoplasmosis.

53
Q
  1. A 56-year-old man undergoes US of the scrotum to investigate painless swelling of both testes. He does not recall any previous trauma and has been systemically well apart from chronic anaemia, for which he is being investigated by the haematologists. US reveals bilateral solid testicular masses. What is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Metastases from renal cell carcinoma.

B. Leukaemia

C. Seminoma

D. Fractures

E. Lymphoma

A
  1. E. Lymphoma

Lymphoma can occur in the testis in one of three ways: as the primary site, as the initial manifestation of occult disease or as the site of recurrence. It is the most common bilateral tumour, and the epididymis and spermatic cord are commonly involved. The sonographic appearance of testicular lymphoma is variable and indistinguishable from that of germ cell tumours. Testicular lymphoma generally appears as discrete hypoechoic lesions, which may completely infiltrate the testicle. Primary leukaemia of the testis is rare. However, the testis is a common site of leukaemia recurrence in children. Seminoma is the most common pure germ cell tumour but affects unilateral testis. Metastases are rare but are reported most commonly in cases of primary prostate and lung cancer. Testicular fracture usually appears as a linear hypoechoic band extending across the testicular parenchyma.

54
Q
  1. A 23-year old woman with multiple skin lesions presents to the ophthalmologist with worsening of vision. MRI brain and orbits reveal a thickened enhancing right optic nerve with further focal areas of T2W hyperintensities in the brainstem and basal ganglia. What is the diagnosis?

A. NF2 - optic tract meningioma

B. TS - optic neuritis

C. MS - optic neuritis

D. NF1 - optic glioma

E. VHL - optic haemangioblastoma

A
  1. D. NF1 - Optic glioma

NF1 is also called peripheral neurofibromatosis or von Recklinghausen disease. The classic triad includes cutaneous lesions, skeletal abnormalities and mental deficiency.
CNS lesions include optic pathway glioma (thickened enhancing optic nerve), cerebral gliomas, hydrocephalus due to aqueduct stenosis, vascular dysplasia including Moyamoya disease, cranial nerve neurofibromas or craniofacial plexiform neurofibromatosis, CNS hamartomas (unidentified bright objects on T2-weighted MRI) and vacuolar/spongiotic myelinopathy. Spinal lesions include cord neurofibroma or neurofibroma of peripheral nerves.
Optic nerve meningioma, seen as ring enhancement in cross section, would be suggestive of NF2 or central neurofibromatosis, classically associated with bilateral vestibular/acoustic schwannomas and ependymomas.
Optic neuritis would also show nerve swelling, high signal on T2 and enhancement post-contrast on T1-weighted FS images; however, enlargement of the nerve on imaging may not be as pronounced as in glioma, and MS is not associated with skin lesions. Note that tuberous sclerosis can cause skin lesions but is associated with optic nerve hamartoma rather than glioma or optic neuritis.

55
Q
  1. A 17-year-old man presents with new onset back and loin pain. A low-dose CT KUB reveals a sclerotic lesion in the lamina of one of the thoracic vertebra. Which one of the following statements concerning osteoid osteomas of the spine is true?

A. They can cause painful scoliosis.

B. Involvement of the lumbar vertebrae is atypical.

C. Lesions of more than 2 cm in diameter are more common on presentation.

D. The ‘nidus’ within the lesion is osteosclerotic.

E. They rarely enhance on MRI after intravenous administration of contrast material.

A
  1. A. They can cause painful scoliosis.

When osteoid osteomas occur in the spine, they typically involve the posterior elements of lumbar vertebrae and are less than 2 cm in diameter. A painful scoliosis is a common presentation. The ‘nidus’ within the lesion is osteolytic. Both the nidus and soft-tissue components enhance on MRI after intravenous administration of contrast material.

56
Q
  1. A 50-year-old woman recently returned from holiday complaining of fever and malaise. CXR showed bilateral non segmental bronchopneumonic pattern. CT showed multiple small nodules in the lungs with enlarged mediastinal and hilar nodes, which show popcorn calcification. What is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Histoplasmosis

B. Tuberculosis

C. Lymphoma

D. Legionnaires disease

E. Blastomycosis

A
  1. A. Histoplasmosis

Histoplasmosis is only seen frequently in North .America. Radiograph may reveal multiple poorly defined nodules in the acute phase. Segmental or lobar pneumonia is less common. Chronic histoplasmosis resembles post-primary TB, with upper lobe cavitation, calcification and fibrosis. Hilar and mediastinal nodes show’ calcification. Occasionally a solitary well defined nodule may form, a so-called histoplasma. When the centre of this lesion calcifies, it forms a target lesion, which is very specific. In some cases, fibrosing mediastinitis can develop and lead to constriction of mediastinal structures, including airways, SVC, and pulmonary’ arteries and veins.

57
Q
  1. A 37-year-old man has recently returned from a holiday and has been feeling unwell. Blood tests carried out by the GP show raised inflammatory markers and abnormal liver function test results. A provisional diagnosis of viral hepatitis is made. All of the following are MR features of acute hepatitis, except

A. Heterogeneous liver enhancement.

B. Irregular outline to liver with caudate lobe hypertrophy.

C. Extrahepatic findings in patients with severe acute hepatitis include gallbladder wall thickening due to oedema and, infrequently, ascites.

D. Involved areas may be normal or demonstrate decreased signal intensity on T1W images and increased signal intensity on T2W images.

E. Periportal oedema appears as high-signal-intensity areas on T2W images.

A
  1. B. Irregular outline to liver with caudate lobe hypertrophy’.

In acute viral hepatitis, the major histologic findings are necrosis of random isolated liver cells or small cell clusters, diffuse liver cell injury’, reactive changes in Kupffer cells and sinusoidal lining cells and an inflammatory infiltrate in portal tracts, and evidence of hepatocytic regeneration during the recovery phase. Confluent necrosis may lead to bridging necrosis connecting portal, central or portal- to-central regions of adjacent lobules, signifying a more severe form of acute hepatitis.
The imaging features of acute hepatitis are non specific and the diagnosis is usually based on serologic, virologic and clinical findings. Probably the most important role of radiology in patients with suspected hepatitis is to help rule out other diseases that produce similar clinical and biochemical abnormalities, such as extrahepatic cholestasis, diffuse metastatic disease and cirrhosis.
At US, in acute hepatitis, the liver is often enlarged and may demonstrate a diffuse decrease in parenchymal echogenicity, which causes a relative increase in the echogenicity’ of the portal vein walls (‘starry night’ pattern). A normal liver echotexture does not exclude the diagnosis of acute hepatitis.
At CT and MR imaging, findings in acute viral hepatitis are non-specific and include hepatomegaly and periportal oedema. At CT, heterogeneous enhancement and well-defined regions of low attenuation may be present. At MR imaging, periportal oedema appears as high signal-intensity areas on T2-weighted images. Involved areas may be normal or demonstrate decreased signal intensity on T1 weighted images and increased signal intensity on T2 weighted images. Extrahepatic findings in patients with severe acute hepatitis include gallbladder wall thickening due to oedema and, infrequently, ascites.

58
Q
  1. A 26-year-old man presents to his GP with progressive swelling of the right hemi-scrotum, pain, and sick sensation, following an impact during a recent cricket match played 4 days ago. Which of the following statements regarding scrotal trauma is incorrect?

A. The tunica albuginea is intact in testicular fracture.

B. The tunica albuginea is disrupted in testicular rupture.

C. Intratesticular hematomas can be multifocal.

D. Testicular fracture requires urgent surgical exploration.

E. Epididymal injuries are generally associated with testicular injuries.

A
  1. D. Testicular fracture requires urgent surgical exploration.

Testicular fracture usually appears as a linear hypoechoic band extending across the testicular parenchyma. The contour remains smooth and the shape of the testicle is maintained. The tunica albuginea is intact. An associated haematocele or testicular haematoma may be seen. The fracture line may not be visible if filled with isoechoic haematoma. Testicular fractures are treated conservatively if normal flow is identified in the surrounding testicular parenchyma. In testicular rupture there is discontinuity of the echogenic tunica albuginea with haemorrhage and extrusion of testicular contents into the scrotal sac. This is an indication for emergency scrotal exploration to salvage the testis.
US shows poorly defined testicular margins and heterogeneous echotexture, with areas of haemorrhage or infarction. Intratesticular haematomas are usually focal and fairly well defined and may be multiple. They are usually hyperechoic in the acute phase or hypoechoic (as the haemorrhage evolves) and lack vascularity. Isolated epididymal injuries are not very common, and these are usually associated with testicular injuries. Contusion or traumatic epididymitis appears as an enlarged and heterogeneous epididymis on US with increased vascularity, sometimes associated with haematocele. The appearance is indistinguishable from infective epididymitis. Hydrocele or scrotal haematoma can occur in isolation or be associated with other injuries.

59
Q
  1. All of the following are features of NF2, except

A. Bilateral vestibular neuroma

B. Multiple meningioma

C. Skeletal dysplasia

D. Spinal cord ependymoma

E. Meningiomatosis

A
  1. C. Skeletal dysplasia

NF2 or central neurofibromatosis is associated with bilateral acoustic neuromas (sine qua non), schwannoma of other cranial nerves, multiple meningiomas, meningiomatosis, paraspinal neurofibromas and spinal cord ependymomas.
Unlike NF1, NF2 is not associated with Lisch nodules, skeletal dysplasia, optic pathway glioma, vascular dysplasia or mental deficiency.

60
Q
  1. A 9-year-old boy on antibiotics from the GP for presumed throat infection presents with abdominal pain. Movement aggravates the pain and the child prefers to lie with a flexed hip. What is the next investigation to help ascertain the diagnosis?

A. Urine test

B. Throat swab

C. US abdomen

D. CT abdomen

E. MRI abdomen

A
  1. C. US abdomen

Be aware of a child who is presumed to have throat or upper respiratory infection, on treatment by GP, who presents with atypical abdominal pain. Younger children cannot describe their symptoms, and up to one third have atypical clinical findings for appendicitis. Lower abdominal pain and flexed leg should raise strong suspicion of a serious pathology’. Urine test is abnormal in 30% of acute appendicitis; hence it doesn’t help to confirm or refute the diagnosis.
CT involves ionisation radiation, and MRI is not the primary modality of investigation. US is the primary’ modality for assessment of the abdomen in children.
The most accurate US finding for acute appendicitis is an outer wall diameter greater than 6 mm under compression. Less sensitive and specific US findings for appendicitis include hyperaemia within the appendiceal wall on colour Doppler images, echogenic inflamed periappendiceal fat and the presence of an appendicolith. Enlarged, reactive mesenteric lymph nodes may be seen with or without appendicitis. Mesenteric adenitis is a controversial differential of acute appendicitis and is generally considered as a diagnosis of exclusion.

61
Q
  1. A middle-aged Caucasian man presents with haemoptysis. CXR shows multiple round, well-defined pulmonary nodules >5 mm. The most likely cause is

A. Rheumatoid nodules

B. Wegener’s granulomatosis

C. Metastasis

D. Miliary nodules

E. Staphylococcal abscess

A
  1. C. Metastasis

The causes of multiple macronodules (>5 mm) include metastasis (the first thing that needs to be excluded unless there is a pre-existent explanation), granuloma, eosinophilic lung disease (eosinophilia, asthma or typical reverse batwing pattern radiograph), abscesses, AVM (history of Osler-Rendu-Weber disease), Wegner’s disease (associated sinus disease, renal dysfunction), rheumatoid lungs (symptoms of connective tissue disease or arthropathy), amyloidosis (chronic disease), parasites and sarcoidosis (uveitis, parotitis or features of Lofgren syndrome).

62
Q
  1. A 66-year-old woman with biopsy-proven hepatic cirrhosis is scheduled to have an MRI for further evaluation of her disease status. Which one of the following MR features is seen earliest in chronic liver disease?

A. Ascites

B. Nodular liver contour

C. Fine reticular pattern of hepatic fibrosis

D. Splenomegaly

E. Oesophageal varices

A
  1. B. Nodular liver contour

Cirrhosis is most commonly caused by chronic hepatitis infection or alcohol abuse, although a number of other diseases causing hepatic injury can lead to cirrhosis. It is pathologically defined by three main characteristics: fibrosis, nodular transformation and distortion of hepatic architecture.
Subtle morphologic changes of the liver may be among the earliest detectable with imaging, including enlargement of the hilar periportal space, enlargement of the major interlobar fissure and expansion of pericholecystic space or gallbladder fossa. Typically, the anterior segment of the right lobe and medial segment of the left lobe atrophy, whereas the caudate lobe and left lateral segment hypertrophy.
The nodular changes in cirrhosis yield characteristic radiologic findings. The nodularity is best seen affecting the liver margin, especially on the left lateral segment. Micronodular cirrhosis, common in alcoholic liver disease, gives rise to a fine cobblestone appearance resulting from nodules typically smaller than 3 mm. A grossly nodular liver margin with 3-15-mm regenerative nodules is characteristic of macronodular cirrhosis, more commonly associated with viral hepatitis. Other changes in cirrhosis include diffuse heterogeneity of the organ on CT and Tl- and T2-weighted MRI. Fibrosis is the predominant cause for hepatic heterogeneity and appears high in signal intensity on T2-weighted MRI.

63
Q
  1. A 26-year-old man presents with a lump in the right scrotum; US reveals a 1.5 cm simple cyst in the head of the epididymis. Incidentally, the US also shows multiple non shadowing echogenic foci in both testes, consistent with testicular microlithiasis. Which one of the following statements regarding testicular microlithiasis is false?

A. It usually is an incidental finding on US.

B. The calcifications develop in the seminiferous tubules.

C. It is typically unilateral.

D. The calcifications are non-shadowing on US.

E. It is variably associated with an increased incidence of testicular tumours.

A
  1. C. It is typically unilateral.

Testicular microlithiasis is a relatively uncommon finding in the general population. It is usually an incidental finding, which was initially thought to be innocuous. However known association include cryptorchidism, infertility, Klinefelter syndrome, Down’s syndrome, atrophy, alveolar microlithiasis and, most importantly, testicular carcinoma. The prevalence of carcinoma in patients with testicular microlithiasis has been reported to be as high as 40%, and follow up US was routine. However, recent articles and guidelines do not recommend regular US follow-up.
At histopathologic analysis, the microcalcifications appear as laminated concretions within the seminiferous tubules, secondary to defective Leydig cells.
On sonograms, microlithiasis appears as punctate, non-shadowing, hyperechoic foci within the usually homogeneous testicle. Five or more calcifications/image should be present to make the diagnosis.
Typically, they are bilateral, symmetric and scattered throughout the testicle; however, they can be asymmetrically distributed or unilateral.

64
Q
  1. A 65 year old man with known alcoholic liver cirrhosis presents to casualty with an acute episode of GI bleed. This is managed medically, and a CT is requested to assess for complications of cirrhosis. Which of the following statements regarding cirrhosis-associated hepatocellular nodules is false?

A. Regenerative nodules are premalignant.

B. Accurate characterisation of cirrhosis-associated nodules may be difficult even on histology.

C. Features such as size and vascularity on imaging may help in characterisation.

D. MRI is better than contrast CT for characterising cirrhotic nodules.

E. Regenerative nodules are benign.

A
  1. A. Regenerative nodules are premalignant.

Cirrhotic livers are characterised by advanced fibrosis and the formation of hepatocellular nodules, which are classified histologically as either (1) regenerative lesions (e.g., regenerative nodules, lobar or segmental hyperplasia, focal nodular hyperplasia) or (2) dysplastic or neoplastic lesions (e.g., dysplastic foci and nodules, hepatocellular carcinomas).
The differentiation of these lesions is important because regenerative nodules are benign, whereas dysplastic and neoplastic nodules are premalignant and malignant, respectively. However, their accurate characterisation may be difficult even at histopathologic analysis.
Comparing the clinical and pathologic findings with radiologic imaging features may facilitate differential diagnosis; in particular, nodule size, vascularity, hepatocellular function and Kupffer cell density assessed at MRI are suggestive of the correct diagnosis.
MRI is more useful than CT for such assessments because it provides better soft-tissue contrast and a more nuanced depiction of different tissue properties. Moreover, a wider variety of contrast agents is available for use in MR imaging. Familiarity with the MR imaging characteristics of cirrhosis-associated hepatocellular nodules is therefore important for optimal diagnosis and management of cirrhotic disease.

65
Q
  1. A 4-year-old boy is brought to the A&E department following a motor vehicle accident in which he was a restrained back-seat passenger. He is in respiratory distress with circulatory collapse. Chest X-ray demonstrates lack of definition of the left hemidiaphragm with multiple cystic-appearing structures projected over the left hemithorax. What is the most likely diagnosis?

A. Morgagni hernia

B. Traumatic diaphragmatic rupture

C. Aspiration pneumonia

D. Bochdalek hernia

E. Congenital lobar emphysema

A
  1. B. Traumatic diaphragmatic rupture

The presenting features include respiratory distress, tracheal deviation and dullness to percussion on one side. Motor vehicle accidents are the cause of traumatic diaphragm rupture in 90% of cases, with falls from height and a kick to the abdomen or object falling on the abdomen as alternative aetiologies. The initial chest X-ray is abnormal in 40%-90% of cases. It may show irregularity or obscuring of the leaf of the diaphragm, fractured ribs, mediastinal shift, intrapleural fluid or detectable viscera within the thorax. The most important radiological sign is incomplete visualisation of the entire diaphragm.