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Essential Radiology for Medical Students, Interns and Residents by Ahuja AT et al. Kyiv, Ukraine: OMF Publishing, 2017

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Abstract

After a hard wok, it is finally here: radiologists deeply specialized in the diagnostics of head and neck disorders give the readers a possibility to touch the cutting-edge practical book Essential Radiology for Medical Students, Interns and Residents. The textbook is edited by Professor Ahuja AT, the most experienced world radiologist from Hong Kong (SAR). Content consists of ten Sections. 1st of which, Head & Neck, is critically important to the specialists related with that area of human body. Uniqueness of that work ─ it consists of 1100 cine loops (CT, MRI scans, US images, etc.) connecting via QR codes. And to Head & Neck Section belongs 111 of them covering the whole range of pathologic. In summary, I would not hesitate to recommend this book to anyone interested in making diagnosis as precise as possible.
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Aer a hard wok, it is nally here: radiologists deeply
specialized in the diagnostics of head and neck disorders
give the readers a possibility to touch the cutting-edge
practical book Essential Radiology for Medical Students,
Interns and Residents. e textbook is edited by Professor
Ahuja AT, the most experienced world radiologist from
Hong Kong (SAR).
Content consists of ten Sections. 1st of which, Head &
Neck, is critically important to the specialists related with
that area of human body. Uniqueness of that work – it
consists of 1100 cine loops (CT, MRI scans, US images,
etc.) connecting via QR codes. And to Head & Neck Section
belongs 111 of them covering the whole range of pathologic
conditions.
In summary, I would not hesitate to recommend this
book to anyone interested in making diagnosis as precise
as possible.
Volodymyr E. Medvediev, MD, ScD, Professor
Honored Sience & Technology Worker
Kyiv, Ukraine
vmedvediev@gmail.com
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Tetiana M. Babkina, MD, ScD, Professor
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Essential Radiology for Medical
Students, Interns and Residents
by Ahuja AT, Antonio GE, Nung RC, et al
Kyiv, Ukraine: OMF Publishing, 2017, pp. 518
Article
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The congenital periorbital cysts like dermoids/epidermoids, in rare cases, can require not only its’ excision but also correction/camouflage of the caused bone deformity. This management can require virtual surgical planning, osteotomy, and placement of the custom-made patient implant. In this report, the ultrasonography (USG) was proved as a highly effective imaging for the presurgical verification of the mass’s structure and establishment of the clinical diagnosis. The multi-slice computed tomography (MSCT), even on a two-slice MSCT machine, provided high-quality three-dimensional reconstruction of the area of bone deformation caused by the cyst and allowed for accurate surgical planning. A 20-year-old male patient with a congenital periorbital epidermoid cyst that led to the deformation of the lateral orbital rim was treated using the soft tissue volume-increasing technique for the correction of bone deformation following cyst removal. Analysis of the terminological diversity related with dermoid/epidermoid cysts is presented. Early diagnostics and management of congenital periorbital cysts can decrease the visual, orbital, and esthetic complications, as well as the need to perform bone reconstructive surgeries or other corrective surgical procedures.
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