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Plate 1 Colour Doppler of eccentric jet of severe mitral regurgitation secondary to mitral valve prolapse. (See image Fig. 6.12, p. 451)

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Plate 2 Laminar pulsed-wave Doppler flow in a patient with mitral stenosis. (See image Fig. 6.14, p. 452)

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Plate 3 Continuous-wave Doppler of tricuspid regurgitation, with PmA systolic pressure calculated as 54mmHg (plus right atrial pressure). (See image Fig. 6.15, p. 453.)

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Plate 4 Endoscopic view of gastric antral vascular ectasia, one cause for blood transfusion-dependent iron deficiency anaemia, which may be treated using argon plasma coagulation. (See image Fig. 7.1(a), p. 503.)

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Plate 5 Colour Doppler image in the same patient showing abnormal vascularity in the wall of the gallbladder. (See image Fig. 13.29, p. 817.)

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Plate 6 99mTc-HMPAO brain imaging. Trans-axial tomographic slices: (a) normal and (b) dementia. (See image Fig. 14.4, p. 875.)

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Plate 7 123I-ioflupane brain transporter imaging: (a) normal dopamine transporters and (b) in Parkinson's disease. (See image Fig. 14.5, p. 877.)

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Plate 8 18F-FDG PET scan—trans-axial views showing CT (top left) correlation with PET (top right). The image fusion is shown bottom left. (See image Fig. 14.17, p. 896.)

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Plate 9 Normal myocardial perfusion scan. (See image Fig. 14.24, p. 907.)

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Plate 10 Myocardial perfusion scan: (a) in fixed perfusion loss (anterolateral infarction) and (b) in inferior stress-induced (reversible) ischaemia. (See image Fig. 14.25, p. 908.)

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Plate 11 MUGA scan showing (a) LV regions of interest at end-diastole and (b) end-systole for ejection fraction calculation; (c) amplitude image showing relative anteroseptal hypokinesis, but (d) synchronous LV contraction. (See image Fig. 14.27, p. 911.)