We welcome the critical analysis of our recent paper and hope the following points clarify the situation: staging system to correlate the position of any malignant nodes found by neck dissection.' found CT slightly less accurate Feinmesser et 1. The chest x-rays of all 4 patients did not show any of
Computed tomography of the clinically negative neck
β Scribed by Wendy B. R. Stern; Dr. Carl E. Silver; Dr. Barbara A. Zeifer; Dr. Mark S. Persky; Dr. Keith S. Heller
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 451 KB
- Volume
- 12
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1043-3074
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Members of the New York Head and Neck Society conducted a multi-institutional review correlating preoperative computed tomography (CT) of the neck with postoperative pathology in 59 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity, pharynx, and larynx, without palpable lymphadenopathy. All underwent CT followed by surgery that included partial or complete cervical lymphadenectomy. Sixteen (28%) patients had occult cervical metastases including 6 (17%) of 36 patients with "early stage" (T1 and T2) primary tumors and 10 (44%) of 23 patients with "advanced (T3 or T4) lesions. There was agreement of CT scan findings with presence or absence of metastatic disease in 41 (69%) of 59 studies, with sensitivity 38%, and with specificity 81%. Findings of central lucency and nodal confluence were highly reliable indicators of malignancy, whereas nodal size bore a less direct relationship. Intravenous contrast medium was useful for anatomical delineation, but not for identification of malignancy. Review of films by a single radiologist did not produce greater diagnostic accuracy than the original interpretations. The authors conclude that while it is not possible to identify all instances of cervical node involvement, employment of CT in addition to physical examination and prognostication
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Background. Elective treatment of the NO neck in patients with laryngeal cancer remains a controversial issue. We reviewed our experience with patients who had neck dissection for NO laryngeal carcinoma with occult metastases in order to compare elective lymphadenectomy results with those achieved w
## Abstract ## Objectives/Hypothesis: To review our results with positron emission tomography and computed tomography fusion imaging (PETβCT) surveillance of the postchemoradiotherapy neck in patients with advanced head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. ## Study Design: Retrospective. ## Method
Normal and pathologic anatomy of the soft tissues of the neck is clearly delineated with high resolution computed tomography (CT). The CT densities of soft tissues, fat, and enhanced blood vessels are strikingly different from each other and, therefore, mass lesions are clearly discernable. Often, a
## Abstract ## Background This multicenter study was undertaken to characterize the metastatic behavior of oral maxillary squamous carcinoma and to determine the role of selective neck dissection. ## Methods A retrospective, multicenter study of patients surgically treated for oral maxillary squ