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- Subsolid pulmonary nodules: Controversy and perspective - PMC
Subsolid nodules, which may be divided into pure ground glass and part-solid nodules, are increasingly identified at CT Subsolid nodules have higher risk of malignancy than solid nodules and represent lesions along the adenocarcinoma spectrum
- Fleischner Society pulmonary nodule recommendations
The Fleischner Society pulmonary nodule recommendations pertain to the follow-up and management of indeterminate pulmonary nodules detected incidentally on CT and are published by the Fleischner Society The guideline does not apply to lung cancer
- Pulmonary (Lung) Nodules: Causes, Symptoms Treatment
Your provider notes a pulmonary nodule on your X-ray or CT scan results — is it serious? Learn more about what causes these growths and next steps
- Pulmonary Nodules: Common Questions and Answers - AAFP
Pulmonary nodules are often incidentally discovered on chest imaging or from dedicated lung cancer screening Screening adults 50 to 80 years of age who have a 20-pack-year smoking history and
- Pulmonary Subsolid Nodules - CHEST
The prognosis of patients with subsolid nodules (SSNs) varies greatly based on factors such as nodule size, growth rate, and consolidation to tumor ratio (CTR) 1 Different types of SSNs require tailored clinical strategies, and their management remains controversial
- Subsolid Nodules - Clinics in Chest Medicine
Subsolid nodules are heterogeneously appearing and behaving entities, commonly encountered incidentally and in high-risk populations Accurate characterization of subsolid nodules, and application of evolving surveillance guidelines, facilitates evidence-based and multidisciplinary patient-centered management
- Pulmonary subsolid nodules: what radiologists need to know . . .
Pulmonary subsolid nodules (SSNs) refer to pulmonary nodules with pure ground-glass nodules and part-solid ground-glass nodules SSNs are frequently encountered in the clinical setting, such as screening chest computed tomography (CT) The main
- The 2023 American Association for Thoracic Surgery (AATS . . .
Lung cancers that present as radiographic subsolid nodules represent a subtype with distinct biological behavior and outcomes The objective of this document is to review the existing literature and report consensus among a group of multidisciplinary experts, providing specific recommendations for the clinical management of subsolid nodules
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