The following table or figure may be downloaded to PowerPoint for personal use in teaching and presentations. This feature is available to all subscribers to the journal.

You MUST read and follow the guidelines at Request to Reproduce AJR Content if you are distributing or using AJR content beyond academic use (limited distribution, non-revenue producing, or educational purposes).

(Downloading may take up to 30 seconds.
If the slide opens in your browser, select File -> Save As to save it.)

Click on image to view larger version.


Figure 16


Fig. 5A —45-year-old woman with uterine myoma. CT images show right gonadal vein (arrow) looks as if it continues directly to mass. Both observers diagnosed this lesion as ovarian tumor. Surgery disclosed leiomyoma of uterus. In this case, normal ovary is not visualized, causing misdiagnosis. However, wraparound appearance is not seen, but abrupt interruption of gonadal vein is recognized at lateral edge of mass, which indicates this mass originates from uterus rather than ovary.