Congenital abnormalities of intrathoracic airways.


Abstract

Multidetector CT has broadened the potential of imaging to demonstrate anomalies of the lung and the tracheobronchial tree with increasing frequency. Two-and three-dimensional reformatting improve the understanding of complex tracheobronchial anomalies.

Most congenital tracheobronchial anomalies are rare and almost always nonsymptomatic; however, some may be confused with or even responsible for respiratory disease.

Tracheal and accessory cardiac bronchi are among the most frequent anomalies, but other ectopic or supernumerary lung buds, developmental tracheobronchial interruption, obstruction, or compression, communicating bronchopulmonary foregut malformations, and bronchial malformations associated with anomalies of situs can be detected, even late after birth.


Full Text

  • DOI - Radiologic Clinics of North America (DOI)
  • Elsevier Science - full-text online (subscription/membership/fee required)
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  • W.B. Saunders - full-text online (subscription/membership/fee required)

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Publication date

2009-03-02


Journal

Radiologic clinics of North America
Radiol Clin North Am (0033-8389)



Journal topics


Language

Eng.


Copyright

Radiologic Clinics of North America

Department of Medical Imaging, University Hospital of Liège, B35 Sart Tilman, B-4000 Liège, Belgium.


Release reference

Radiol Clin North Am. 2009 Mar;47(2):203-25



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