Primary Article

Head and Neck Radioangiography

Authors: ROBERT F. LONG MD, SANFORD V. BERENS MD, GERALD E. CAPLAN MD

Abstract

An analysis of one year's experience at our institution with 781 cerebral radioangiograms is reported. In patients who had follow-up radioangiographic evaluation, an overall accuracy of 88% was achieved using the anterior method. Accuracy in detecting carotid occlusive lesions alone was 83%. Detection of subdural hematomas by radioangiography was exceptional. Our results correlate well with those of others in the detection of cerebrovascular occlusive disease, other vascular lesions, and avascular lesions. In our experience, the extremely high yield of information and the simplicity of performing radioangiography of the head and neck justify its routine use in all cases referred for brain scanning.

This content is limited to qualifying members.

Existing members, please login first

If you have an existing account please login now to access this article or view purchase options.

Purchase only this article ($25)

Create a free account, then purchase this article to download or access it online for 24 hours.

Purchase an SMJ online subscription ($75)

Create a free account, then purchase a subscription to get complete access to all articles for a full year.

Purchase a membership plan (fees vary)

Premium members can access all articles plus recieve many more benefits. View all membership plans and benefit packages.

References