. The American journal of roentgenology, radium therapy and nuclear medicine . re Group (g) (mediastinal adenitis),thirteen were Group (/) (discrete mottlinguncomplicated); the remaining thirty-onecould not be classified, as the presenceof fluid completely obscured the originalpatholog\. Of the cases which came imder roentgenray observation early enough, the hemor-rhagic process was found to appear pri-marily in the left lung in 82 per is a striking fact, but no less remark-able than the observation that in ourninety-one cases in which there was un-mistakable evidence, the initial in


. The American journal of roentgenology, radium therapy and nuclear medicine . re Group (g) (mediastinal adenitis),thirteen were Group (/) (discrete mottlinguncomplicated); the remaining thirty-onecould not be classified, as the presenceof fluid completely obscured the originalpatholog\. Of the cases which came imder roentgenray observation early enough, the hemor-rhagic process was found to appear pri-marily in the left lung in 82 per is a striking fact, but no less remark-able than the observation that in ourninety-one cases in which there was un-mistakable evidence, the initial invasionappeared in the lower left lobe eighty-fivetimes to six in the upper left lobe. Group (a) includes a few cases whereautopsy revealed a small amount of pleuralfluid, which roentgenographically was notjjresent twenty-four hours before this developed as a terminalprocess. The importance of serial roentgeno-grams in influenza has been amply provenin this clinic, chiefly in detecting and iden- 2l6 Hemorrhagic Pneumonitis Roentgen Ray No. 5770 Group (o) ir^.


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