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Fig. 3 | European Journal of Hybrid Imaging

Fig. 3

From: A prospective study determining and comparing the diagnostic accuracy of fluoride-PET/CT, choline-PET/CT, whole-body bone SPECT/CT and whole-body MRI for the detection of bone metastases in patients with prostate cancer

Fig. 3

Images of a 57 year old male with a two years history of prostate cancer (Gleason grade group 5, T2a, N1, M0), in androgen deprivation therapy, and referred for bone imaging due to increasing prostate specific antigen (NaF-PET/CT and WB-SPECT/CT images from the same patient are shown in Fig. 2). a-d Whole-body 3 T MR images demonstrate a lesion in the right superior pubic ramus detected on all four MRI sequences highly suspicious of a bone metastasis: (a) hypointense signal intensity on coronal T1w, (b) high signal intensity on coronal STIR, (c) high signal intensity on axial DWI b1000 and (d) low signal intensity on axial ADC

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