Abstract

All the main cross-sectional anatomical imaging techniques, CT, MR and ultrasound, suffer from the same problem, that they lack specificity. Benign may be indistinguishable from malignant tumours and the appearances of infection frequently overlap those of malignant disease and vice-versa. A vast amount of data are presented in each image of a CT or MRI series and it is very easy to overlook significant involvement of nodes and organs by metastatic disease. Nodal involvement by tumour is usually assessed using the size of the nodes. This is

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