 So everyone our topic of the paper is MDCT in Evaluation of Mid-Architecture Traumas and Dr. Vivek Kosh has a resident in Department of Diagnosis at Telgaria Basin Institute of Medicine and Dr. Harman Hospital. Under the guidance of Dr. Kavitha, one of his students represented department of re-diagnosis. Our germ cell tumors include teratomus, they may arise, you know, or from pollutants and health of thymus. But teratomus, germ cell tumors, which contains elevators of all germ layers. They are classified as mature, cystic, mature naline ones. Mid-Architecture Traumas are usually detected in sedentary, chest or teratomus or the patient who is symptomatic. The tumor last size compresses the resistance structures and invades adjacent structures. Very city findings say they have a deficiency with any of the movement lesions. Like benign lesions are usually very defined. They are cystic and major to the lesion symptoms. The meninal lesions are nodular, poorly defined, ill-defined. They are more likely to have a soil enhancing mass, lesion mass within the teratomus or with a very small portion of the tumor containing fat. Meninal teratomus have a greater tendency to compress or evade adjacent structures. Mid-Architecture Traumas is an uncommon type of teratoma. It's rare to find teratoma in question mid-Architecture Traumas. So we have the papers to identify mid-Architecture teratomus and characterize them based on location, amazing features and innovation. This study was carried out in Department of Diagnosis and Dr. Arnold Hospital in a total of 30 patients. We started with a test series of screening variety for all those patients who were having a suspected of mid-Architecture Traumas pathology. Subsequently, CCD chest was run. And the CCD was run in 128-slice CMOS tomato CT scan. The patients who were clearly suspected of mid-Architecture Traumas or incident detected on chest x-ray, they were included in the study by those patients who were having severe allergic to contrast or pain in female savers from the study. Starting the cases, this is the first case of 50-year-old male with a complaint of chest pain for the last three months, came to the hospital, patient underwent x-rays. This is a chest x-ray POV. We can see there is a large mass which is obliterated out of the outline, which is surrounded by a lemon on one side. We can see that there is a hyaluronic acid clearly seen passing through the mass. Along with the cardiac cellulose are clear, not obscured with a mass. So, on the basis of x-ray, this gives an impression of post-traumidastinal mass. This is a CCT, X-ray. And essentially, we can see there is a large mass which is involved in both sides of the post-traumidastinal along with the other ports, calcification and patternation it has within the mass. It is based on the cardiomastinal structures anteriorly. The mass will also fit in both the main bronchosis, along with the aorta. We can see the mass is displacing the cardiomastinal structures anteriorly. The mass is going to be playing off carina along with lots of factors in both the bronchosis, along with the displacement of heart and gastrointestinal structures anteriorly. We can also see a lytic area in the T7 vertebral body anteriorly, which is a metastatic agent. So, this is a case of an image of a teratoma with malignant changes. Coming to the second case, this is a 30-year-old male with printable templates of heaviness in chest for the last three months. Our chest structure showed a softest density legion in midasinum. So, it's only CCT chest-wise. And we can see there is a well-defined cystic mass with a thick peripheral enhancement along with internal hyperdense areas within, which is having lots of fat from the adjacent midasinal dura. However, fat from the aorta are maintained. The mass is small in size, well-defined internal cystic area. And the small size is not having mass effect on adjacent structures, not involving invading adjacent structures. So, this is a case of a match-out teratoma. This is a case 325-year-old male with printable templates of chest for the last one-and-a-half month. Chest structure shows a specious mass in the telsic open midasinum region. So, this is only CCT chest-wise. And we can see that we are correct with the axial and column and sagittal images of the CCT chest. You can see the mass is minimally enhancing. This is a large mass, which is involving internal middle midasinum, the obelisk and outline of the middle midasinum. And it also has calcified focal and high-potency areas within, which is encasing the subclavian arteries having lots of fat from the aorta, along with the midasinum and loss of fat from the midasinum, and having mass effect on adjacent cardinal and rastinal structures displacing at a great vessels and heart. So, this is a case of a match-out teratoma. This is a case 432-year-old male with printable chest in disney for the last five months. Chest structure shows a large mass in midasinum, which is displacing adjacent rastinal structures. These are CCT axial and column images, and we can see that there is a large mass in the anterior middle midasinum, which is displacing the heart inferiorly, along with the displacing adjacent midasinum structures and in wading, and having loss of fat came with the aorta, encasing the subclavian acava, along with a large effusion on the right side, which is a small effusion on the left side, but there is a large effusion on the right side, along with thickening of the pura, and the mass is having loss of fat came with the pulmonary artery with the aorta, displacing the midasinum structure posteriorly. We can see both the loss of fat came with the bronchus along with displacement rastinal structures posteriorly. So this is a case of immature teratoma with malignant disgeneration, which has gradually progressed over time. We can see that the mass is having, large mass is having, there is a pleural thickening along with the maliant, likely chance of maliant effusion. So this is a case of maliant, immature teratoma with maliant disgeneration, along with suspicious pleural metastasis. So in total of 30 cases, when the study 15 were having between midasinum masses, 12 were between midasinum masses, and 3 were in posterior midasinum masses. All the interim midasinum masses generally having mature mass while 5 were having mature teratomas. Out of middle midasinum masses, 7 were having mature teratoma, 4 cases of mature teratoma, and 1 teratoma with malignant disgeneration. Posterior midasinum masses in 2 cases of mature teratoma and 1 case of mature teratoma. Few of the reasons were seen involving more than one compartment, however, they were classified as the basis of the main compartment discussion. Mature teratomas are most common in the brain, the most of all the tissue is the actotermal element in the skin. Here, they often add muscles, tautness, this most often seen in children and young adults. In general, most of the mature teratomas can contain mainly elements of teratoma, layers, jumpscares, like skin, it's a bandage, however, it's a kind of stone to wear, it's a kind of stone, there's elements of endermal and there's a lot of cells within. Mature teratoma are poorly defined, contains the cells and tissues of fetal development. They are mainly seen in the potential and when they follow the brain course, however, if they are seen in adults, they follow the aggressive and malignant course, malignant teratomas, contains phlegm and tissue, in addition to mature and mature tissues, they are very proprosperous, they are seen exclusively in the main and usually in the customer machine, mature teratomas, angiosarcomas, aranomas, mature teratomas. Teratomas are common to find in mid-astom, they are seen in mid-astom, they are mainly seen in mid-astom, it's really different in mid-astom and teratomas, but one case of it is that they actually have to compartmentalize the mask in 20-metre post-environment which is lateral and peer-views, and on the basis of high-low mobile sensors, and they have also the classification of fetal changes within the mask. MDCT is the primary mentality between benign and malignant lesions, benign lesions are well-defined, well-defined, well-defined, well-defined, well-defined, well-defined, they are in fact, in a malignant lesion of tenancy and in a filter rate on complete adjacent structures. So, we concluded there is a MDCT modality of choice to confirm a diagnosis between benign and malignant masks and distinct initiators in vision for better pre-op and more outcome, Cheshirgraf helps to narrow our definitions. Thank you.