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. 2020 Jun 25;298(1):E1–E10. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2020202543

Figure 7c:

Contrast-enhanced CT scans of the abdomen and pelvis in a 15-year-old boy who presented with abdominal pain and clinical features of sepsis and subsequently diagnosed with multisystem infl ammatory syndrome in children. (a) Coronal image of the abdomen demonstrates gallbladder wall edema (white arrow). There is extensive thickening of the cecal wall thickening (arrowhead) and free fluid within the pelvis (black arrow). (b) Axial slice through the lower abdomen shows the cecal wall thickening (arrow) with multiple adjacent mesenteric nodes (arrowhead) and surrounding fat-stranding. (c) Coronal image through the left upper quadrant shows a focal subcapsular, hypoattenuating region within the spleen in keeping with a splenic infarct (arrow).

Contrast-enhanced CT scans of the abdomen and pelvis in a 15-year-old boy who presented with abdominal pain and clinical features of sepsis and subsequently diagnosed with multisystem infl ammatory syndrome in children. (a) Coronal image of the abdomen demonstrates gallbladder wall edema (white arrow). There is extensive thickening of the cecal wall thickening (arrowhead) and free fluid within the pelvis (black arrow). (b) Axial slice through the lower abdomen shows the cecal wall thickening (arrow) with multiple adjacent mesenteric nodes (arrowhead) and surrounding fat-stranding. (c) Coronal image through the left upper quadrant shows a focal subcapsular, hypoattenuating region within the spleen in keeping with a splenic infarct (arrow).