Osteochondroma
- Benign
- Exclusively with childhood irradiation.
- Histologically identical to spontaneous osteochondroma.
Sarcoma
- Malignant
- Latent period of 4 years or more.
- Histologically identical to spontaneous sarcoma.
- Commonly malignant fibrous histiocytoma or osteosarcoma.
- Occurs in either bone or soft tissue.
Tumors in Other Organ Systems
- Squamous cell cancer of the skin.
- Breast cancer.
- Leukemia, with shorter latent period than sarcoma.
- Rectal carcinoma.
- Rectal polyp.
- Hypertrophied anal papilla.
- Diverticular phlegmon (prolapsing into the pouch of Douglas).
- Sigmoid colon carcinoma (prolapsing into the pouch of Douglas).
- Metastatic deposits at the pelvic reflection (Blumer’s shelf).
- Primary pelvic malignancy (uterine, ovarian, prostatic, or cervical).
- Mesorectal lymph nodes.
- Endometriosis.
- Solitary rectal ulcer syndrome.
- Foreign body.
- Feces.
- Presacral cyst.
- Amebic granuloma.
- Vaginal tampon and even the pubic bone may be mistaken for a rectal mass.
- Anal fissure.
- Thrombosed hemorrhoid.
- Anorectal abscess.
- Foreign bodies.
- Fecal impaction.
- Endometriosis
- Neoplasms (primary or metastatic).
- Pelvic inflammatory disease.
- Inflammation of sacral nerves.
- Compression of sacral nerves.
- Prostatitis
- Other: proctalgia fugax, uterine abnormalities, myopathies, coccygodynia.
- Idiopathic (>50% of cases).
- Medications (most frequent with phenytoin).
- Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
- Viral infections (parvovirus B19, EB virus, mumps, hepatitis).
- Myelodysplastic syndromes.
- Thymoma
- Autoimmune diseases.
- Allogenic bone marrow transplant from ABO incompatible donor.
- Pregnancy
- Damaged microvasculature.
- Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura–hemolytic uremic syndrome (TTP–HUS).
- Associated with pregnancy: preeclampsia or eclampsia; hemolysis plus elevated liver enzymes plus low platelets (HELLP syndrome).
- Associated with malignancy, with or without mitomycin C treatment.
- Vasculitis: polyarteritis, Wegener granulomatosis, acute glomerulonephritis, or Rickettsia-like infections.
- Systemic lupus erythematosus.
- Abnormalities of renal vasculature: malignant hypertension, acute glomerulonephritis, scleroderma, or allograft rejection with or without cyclosporine treatment.
- Disseminated intravascular coagulation.
- Malignant hypertension.
- Catastrophic antiphospholipid antibody syndrome.
- Atrioventricular malformations.
- Kasabach-Merritt syndrome.
- Hemangioendotheliomas.
- Atrioventricular shunts for congenital and acquired conditions (e.g., stents, coils, trans-jugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt, Levine shunts).
- Cardiac abnormalities:
- Replaced valve, prosthesis, graft, or patch.
- Aortic stenosis or regurgitant jets (e.g., in ruptured sinus of Valsalva).
- Drugs:
- Cyclosporine.
- Mitomycin.
- Ticlopidine.
- Clopidogrel.
- Tacrolimus.
- Cocaine.
- Systemic infection:
- Bacterial endocarditis.
- Brucellosis.
- Cytomegalovirus.
- Human immunodeficiency virus.
- Ehrlichiosis.
- Rocky Mountain spotted fever
- Infectious conjunctivitis (bacterial, viral).
- Allergic conjunctivitis.
- Acute glaucoma.
- Keratitis (bacterial, viral).
- Iritis.
- Trauma
- Obvious open globe.
- Corneal abrasion.
- Corneal ulcer.
- Subconjunctival hemorrhage.
- Hyphema.
- Occult open globe.
- Herpes simplex virus glaucoma.
- Iritis, traumatic iritis.
- Scleritis.
- Conjunctivitis.
- Blepharitis.
- Ultraviolet keratitis.
- Episcleritis.
- Conjunctival foreign body.
- Dry eye.
- Contact lens overwear syndrome.
- Trauma.
- Gout.
- Infection (septic joint).
- Pseudogout (calcium pyrophosphate dehydrate crystal deposition).
- Psoriatic arthropathy.
- Reactive arthritis.
- Palindromic rheumatism.
- Hematuria.
- Porphyrins.
- Hemoglobinuria.
- Myoglobinuria.
- Medications (phenazopyridine, aminosalicylic acid, deferoxamine, phenazopyridine, phenolphthalein, NSAIDs, rifampin, phenytoin, methyldopa, doxorubicin, phenacetin).
- Foods (beets, berries, maize).
- Urate crystalluria.
Immediate/Delayed Graft Function (1-3 Days)
- Acute tubular necrosis.
- Hyperacute humoral rejection.
- Urinary leak or obstruction.
- Renal artery or vein thrombosis.
- Recurrence of disease (e.g., focal segmental glomerulosclerosis).
Early Posttransplantation Period (First Month)
- Acute cellular rejection.
- Acute humoral rejection.
- Calcineurin inhibitor toxicity.
- Urinary tract obstruction.
- Volume depletion.
- Recurrence of disease.
Late Acute Dysfunction
- Acute rejection.
- Cyclosporine or tacrolimus toxicity.
- Recurrence of primary disease.
- Tubulointerstitial nephritis, drug-induced.
- Renal artery stenosis.
- Infection (bacterial urinary tract infection [UTI], cytomegalovirus, BK virus).
- Hemodynamic (volume; use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, angiotensin II receptor blocker).
Chronic Dysfunction
- Chronic rejection.
- Cyclosporine or tacrolimus toxicity.
- Recurrent renal disease.
- De novo renal disease.
- Urinary tract obstruction.
- Bacterial UTI.
- Hypertensive nephrosclerosis.
- Atrial fibrillation.
- Angiography or stent placement.
- Abdominal aortic surgery.
- Trauma.
- Renal artery aneurysm/dissection.
- Vasculitis.
- Thrombosis in patient with fibromuscular dysplasia.
- Atherosclerosis.
- Septic embolism.
- Mural thrombus thromboembolism.
- Atrial myxoma thromboembolism.
- Mitral stenosis thromboembolism.
- Prosthetic valve thromboembolism.
- Renal cell carcinoma.
Vascular:
- Abdominal aortic aneurysm.
- Aortic dissection.
- Renal artery dissection.
- Renal artery stenosis.
- Renal vein thrombosis.
- Renal infarct.
- Mesenteric ischemia.
- Retroperitoneal hemorrhage.
Gastrointestinal:
- Incarcerated hernia.
- Appendicitis.
- Cholecystitis.
- Biliary colic.
- Pancreatitis.
- Bowel obstruction.
- Diverticulitis.
Gynecologic:
- Ectopic pregnancy.
- Ovarian torsion.
- Tuboovarian abscess.
- Pelvic inflammatory disease.
- Endometriosis.
Genitourinary:
- Testicular torsion.
- Pyelonephritis.
- Perinephric abscess.
- Urinary tract tumor.
- Renal papillary necrosis.
- Upper urinary tract hemorrhage.
Musculoskeletal:
- Lumbar strain.
- Radiculopathy.
- Disk herniation.
- Vertebral compression fracture.
Dermatologic:
- Herpes zoster.
Miscellaneous:
- Factitious.
- Simple cysts.
- Acquired cystic kidney disease.
- Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease.
- Autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease.
- Medullary cystic disease.
- Medullary sponge kidney.
Nonspecific
- Pruritus
- Xerosis
- Acquired ichthyosis
- Pigmentary alteration
- Pallor (secondary to anemia)
- Hyperpigmentation
- Dyspigmentation (yellow tint)
- Infections (fungal, bacterial, viral)
- Purpura
Somewhat Specific
- Acquired perforating dermatosis
- Calciphylaxis
- Metastatic calcification
- Blistering disorders
- Porphyria cutanea tarda
- Pseudoporphyria
- Eruptive xanthomas
- Pseudo–Kaposi’s sarcoma
Specific
- Nephrogenic systemic fibrosis
- Dialysis-associated steal syndrome
- Metastatic renal cell carcinoma
- Dialysis-related amyloidosis
- Arteriovenous shunt dermatitis
- Uremic frost
- Rhabdomyolysis and myoglobinuria.
- Vigorous exercise.
- Arterial embolization.
- Status epilepticus.
- Status asthmaticus.
- Coma-induced and pressure-induced myonecrosis.
- Heat stress.
- Diabetic ketoacidosis.
- Myopathy.
- Alcoholism.
- Hypokalemia.
- Hypophosphatemia.
- Hemoglobinuria.
- Transfusion reactions.
- Snake envenomation.
- Malaria.
- Mechanical destruction of RBCs by prosthetic valves.
- G6PD deficiency.
Diabetic glomerulosclerosis (systemic disease involving the kidney).
Hypertensive nephrosclerosis.
Glomerular disease:
- Glomerulonephritis.
- Amyloidosis, light chain disease (systemic disease involving the kidney).
- Systemic lupus erythematosus, Wegener granulomatosis (systemic disease involving the kidney).
Tubulointerstitial disease:
- Reflux nephropathy (chronic pyelonephritis).
- Analgesic nephropathy.
- Obstructive nephropathy (stones, benign prostatic hypertrophy).
- Myeloma kidney (systemic disease involving the kidney).
Vascular disease:
- Scleroderma (systemic disease involving the kidney).
- Vasculitis (systemic disease involving the kidney).
- Renovascular renal failure (ischemic nephropathy).
- Atheroembolic renal disease (systemic disease involving the kidney).
Cystic disease:
- Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease.
- Medullary cystic kidney disease.
Abnormalities of the Vasculature
- Renal arteries: atherosclerosis, thromboembolism, arteritis.
- Renal veins: thrombosis.
- Microvasculature: vasculitis, thrombotic microangiopathy.
Abnormalities of Glomeruli (Acute Glomerulonephritis)
- Antiglomerular membrane disease (Goodpasture’s syndrome).
- Immune complex glomerulonephritis: SLE, postinfectious, idiopathic, membranoproliferative.
Abnormalities of Interstitium (Acute Interstitial Nephritis)
- Drugs (e.g., antibiotics, NSAIDs, diuretics, anticonvulsants, allopurinol).
- Infectious pyelonephritis.
- Infiltrative: lymphoma, leukemia, sarcoidosis.
Abnormalities of Tubules
- Physical obstruction (uric acid, oxalate, light chains).
- Acute tubular necrosis:
- Ischemic.
- Toxic (antibiotics, chemotherapy, immunosuppressives, radiocontrast dyes, heavy metals, myoglobin, hemolyzed RBCs).
Ureter and Renal Pelvis
Intrinsic obstruction:
- Blood clots.
- Stones.
- Sloughed papillae: diabetes, sickle cell disease, analgesic nephropathy.
- Inflammatory: fungus ball.
Extrinsic obstruction:
- Malignancy.
- Retroperitoneal fibrosis.
- Iatrogenic: inadvertent ligation of ureters.
Bladder
- Prostatic hypertrophy or malignancy.
- Neuropathic bladder.
- Blood clots.
- Bladder cancer.
- Stones.
Urethral
- Strictures.
- Congenital valves.
Decreased Cardiac Output
- CHF.
- Arrhythmias.
- Pericardial constriction or tamponade.
- Pulmonary embolism.
Hypovolemia
- GI tract loss (vomiting, diarrhea, nasogastric suction).
- Blood losses (trauma, GI tract surgery).
- Renal losses (diuretics, mineralocorticoid deficiency, postobstructive diuresis).
- Skin losses (burns).
Volume Redistribution (Decrease in Effective Blood Volume)
- Hypoalbuminemic states (cirrhosis, nephrosis).
- Sequestration of fluid in “third” space (ischemic bowel, peritonitis, pancreatitis).
- Peripheral vasodilation (sepsis, vasodilators, anaphylaxis).
Altered Renal Vascular Resistance
- Increase in afferent vascular resistance (NSAIDs, liver disease, sepsis, hypercalcemia, cyclosporine).
- Decrease in efferent arteriolar tone (ACE inhibitors).
Thrombosis: Spontaneous
- Atherosclerotic disease of aorta and renal artery.
- Fibromuscular dysplasia of renal artery.
- Aneurysms of aorta or renal artery.
- Dissection of aorta or renal artery.
- Marfan’s syndrome.
- Ehlers-Danlos syndrome.
- Vasculitis involving renal artery.
- Polyarteritis nodosa.
- Takayasu’s arteritis.
- Kawasaki disease.
- Thromboangiitis obliterans.
- Other necrotizing vasculitides.
- Inflammatory disease of the aorta or renal artery.
- Syphilis.
- Tuberculosis.
- Mycoses.
- Hypercoagulable states.
- Nephrotic syndrome.
- Antiphospholipid syndrome.
- Antithrombin III deficiency.
- Homocystinuria.
- Thrombotic microangiopathies.
- Hemolytic-uremic syndrome.
- Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura.
- Antiphospholipid syndrome.
- Malignant hypertension.
- Scleroderma.
- Sickle cell nephropathy.
- Polycythemia vera.
- Postpartum hemolytic-uremic syndrome.
- Hyperacute vascular allograft rejection.
Thrombosis: Induced
- Traumatic.
- Following endovascular intervention.
- Post renal transplantation.
Embolism
- Cardiac source.
- Atrial fibrillation or other arrhythmias.
- Native and prosthetic valvular heart disease.
- Infective endocarditis.
- Marantic endocarditis.
- Myocardial infarction with mural thrombi.
- Left atrial myxoma or other tumor.
- Noncardiac sources.
- Atheromatous embolic disease.
- Paradoxical emboli.
- Fat emboli.
- Tumor emboli.
- Therapeutic renal embolization.
- Segmental renal infarction of childhood.
- Cisplatinum and gemcitabine.
- Sickle cell disease or sickle cell trait.
No Papillary/Caliceal Abnormality
Diffuse Parenchymal Loss
Bilateral:
- Chronic glomerulonephritis.
- Diffuse small-vessel disease.
- Hereditary nephropathies.
Unilateral:
- Renal artery stenosis.
- Postirradiation.
- Rare:
- Hypoplastic kidney.
- Postobstructive atrophy.
Focal Parenchymal Loss
Infarct.
Previous trauma.
Papillary/Caliceal Abnormality
Diffuse Parenchymal Loss
- Obstructive nephropathy.
- Generalized reflux nephropathy.
No Parenchymal Loss
- Papillary necrosis.
- TB.
- Medullary sponge kidney.
- Megacalices.
- Pelvicaliceal cyst.
Focal Parenchymal Loss
- Focal reflux nephropathy (chronic atrophic pyelonephritis).
- TB.
- Calculus disease.
- Nephrotic syndrome.
- Renal cell carcinoma.
- Aortic aneurysm causing compression.
- Lymphadenopathy.
- Retroperitoneal fibrosis.
- Estrogen therapy.
- Pregnancy.
- Renal cell carcinoma with vein invasion.
- Severe dehydration.
Noncardiopulmonary
- Hypothermia or hyperthermia.
- Hypoglycemia.
- Metabolic acidosis.
- Drug intoxications; withdrawal.
- Polycythemia.
- Central nervous system insult.
- Asphyxia.
- Hemorrhage.
- Neuromuscular disease.
- Werdnig-Hoffman disease.
- Myopathies.
- Phrenic nerve injury.
- Skeletal abnormalities.
- Asphyxiating thoracic dystrophy.
Cardiovascular
- Left-sided outflow obstruction.
- Hypoplastic left heart.
- Aortic stenosis.
- Coarctation of the aorta.
- Cyanotic lesions.
- Transposition of the great vessels.
- Total anomalous pulmonary venous return
- Tricuspid atresia.
- Right-sided outflow obstruction.
Pulmonary
- Upper airway obstruction.
- Choanal atresia.
- Vocal cord paralysis.
- Meconium aspiration.
- Clear fluid aspiration.
- Transient tachypnea.
- Pneumonia.
- Pulmonary hypoplasia.
- Primary.
- Secondary.
- Hyaline membrane disease.
- Pneumothorax.
- Pleural effusions.
- Mass lesions.
- Lobar emphysema.
- Cystic adenomatoid malformation.
Abnormal Respiratory Capacity (Normal Respiratory Workloads)
- Acute depression of central nervous system:
- Various causes.
- Chronic central hypoventilation syndromes:
- Obesity-hypoventilation syndrome.
- Sleep apnea syndrome.
- Hypothyroidism.
- Shy-Drager syndrome (multisystem atrophy syndrome).
- Acute toxic paralysis syndromes:
- Botulism.
- Tetanus.
- Toxic ingestion or bites.
- Organophosphate poisoning.
- Neuromuscular disorders (acute and chronic):
- Myasthenia gravis.
- Guillain-Barré syndrome.
- Drugs.
- Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
- Muscular dystrophies.
- Polymyositis.
- Spinal cord injury.
- Traumatic phrenic nerve paralysis.
Abnormal Pulmonary Workloads
- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease:
- Chronic bronchitis.
- Asthmatic bronchitis.
- Emphysema.
- Asthma and acute bronchial hyperreactivity syndromes.
- Upper airway obstruction.
- Interstitial lung diseases.
Abnormal Extrapulmonary Workloads
- Chronic thoracic cage disorders:
- Severe kyphoscoliosis.
- After thoracoplasty.
- After thoracic cage injury.
- Acute thoracic cage trauma and burns.
- Pneumothorax.
- Pleural fibrosis and effusions.
- Abdominal processes.
Disorders of the phrenic nerve
- Guillain-Barré syndrome
- Poliomyelitis
Respiratory muscle atrophy
Disorders of neuromuscular transmission
- Myasthenia gravis
- Ventilator dependence
- Malnutrition
- Myopathy
- Critical illness polyneuropathy/myopathy
Altered diaphragmatic force-length relationship
- Dynamic hyperinflation and diaphragmatic flattening
- Retinal venous obstruction.
- Diabetic retinopathy.
- Ocular ischemic syndrome.
- Hyperviscosity.
- Tortuosity of retinal artery.
- Allergic rhinitis.
- Infectious rhinitis.
- Vasomotor rhinitis.
- Exercise-induced rhinitis.
- Emotional rhinitis.
- Rhinitis medicamentosa.
- Hormone-mediated rhinitis (menses, pregnancy, oral contraceptives, hypothyroidism).
- GERD.
- Chemical- or irritant-induced rhinitis.
- Rhinitis mimics:
- Deviated septum.
- Enlarged adenoids.
- Nasal polyps/tumors.
- Foreign bodies.
- CSF rhinorrhea.
- Sarcoidosis.
- Midline granuloma.
- Granulomatosis with polyangiitis.
- SLE.
- Sjögren’s syndrome.
- Allergic
- Systemic.
- Local (entopy).
- Work-Related
- Irritant.
- Corrosive.
- Immunologic.
- Infectious (Rhinosinusitis)
- Allergic.
- Nonallergic.
- Nonallergic
- Idiopathic.
- Nonallergic with eosinophilia.
- Atrophic.
- Primary.
- Secondary.
- Medication-related.
- Topical vasoconstrictors (rhinitis medicamentosa).
- Oral medications.
- Exercise-induced.
- Cold air–induced.
- Gustatory.
- Hormonal.
- Aging.
- Systemic diseases.
Allergic Rhinitis
- Seasonal.
- Perennial.
- Combined seasonal and perennial.
- Allergic fungal rhinosinusitis.
Nonallergic Rhinitis
- Nonallergic, noninflammatory idiopathic rhinopathy (vasomotor rhinitis).
- Nonallergic rhinitis with eosinophilia syndrome (NARES).
- Cold dry air–induced rhinitis.
- Gustatory rhinitis.
Infectious Rhinosinusitis
- Bacterial.
- Viral.
- Fungal.
- Granulomatous.
Drug-Induced Rhinitis
- Oral contraceptives.
- Various antihypertensives and ocular β-blockers.
- Topical decongestants (rhinitis medicamentosa).
- Phosphodiesterase-5 antagonists.
Mechanical Causes of Rhinosinusitis
- Septal deviation.
- Nasal foreign body.
- Choanal atresia or stenosis.
- Adenoid hypertrophy.
- Encephalocele.
- Glioma.
- Dermoid.
Innate and Acquired Immunity Disorders
- Congenital or acquired immunodeficiencies.
- Cystic fibrosis.
- Immotile cilia syndrome.
Systemic Inflammatory Disorders
- Sarcoidosis.
- Granulomatosis with polyangiitis.
- Vasculitis.
Neoplastic Causes
- Benign:
- Polyps.
- Nasopharyngeal angiofibroma.
- Inverting papilloma.
- Malignant:
- Adenocarcinoma.
- Squamous cell carcinoma.
- Aesthesioneuroblastoma.
- Lymphoma.
- Rhabdomyosarcoma.
Normal
- Isolated defects.
- Projectional artifacts (due to lordosis).
Neurologic
- Paralytic poliomyelitis.
- Quadriparesis.
Collagen Vascular Disease
- Rheumatoid arthritis.
- SLE.
- Systemic sclerosis.
Local Pressure
- Chest drainage tube.
- Osteochondroma.
- Neural tumor.
- Coarctation of aorta.
Hyperparathyroidism Miscellaneous
- Osteogenesis imperfecta.
- Marfan’s syndrome.
ARTERIAL
Aortic Obstruction
- Aortic coarctation.
- Aortic thrombosis.
- Aortitis.
Subclavian Artery Obstruction
- Blalock-Taussig operation.
- Arteritis.
- Atherosclerotic occlusion.
Pulmonary Oligemia
- Pulmonary atresia.
- Tetralogy of Fallot.
- Multiple pulmonary arterial stenoses.
VENOUS
Chronic Superior Vena Caval Obstruction
Arteriovenous Malformation
- Pulmonary.
- Chest wall.
- Neural
Neurofibromas
Normal variation.
Right ventricular hypertrophy.
Left posterior fascicular block.
Lateral myocardial infarction.
Pulmonary embolism.
Dextrocardia.
Mechanical shifts or emphysema causing a vertical heart.