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1.
This study describes the MR appearances of malignant hypervascular liver lesions pre- and post-hepatic-arterial chemoembolization, with correlation to serial imaging and clinical responses. Eight patients with malignant hypervascular liver lesions underwent pretreatment and posttreatment MR examination on a 1.5-T MR imager. MR sequences included T1-weighted spoiled gradient echo (SGE), T2-weighted fat-suppressed spin echo or turbo spin echo, and dynamic gadolinium-enhanced SGE images. All patients underwent pretreatment, initial posttreatment, and subsequent posttreatment MR studies. The histology of primary tumors included various types of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) (four patients: fibrolamellar HCC [one patient], HCC [two patients], mixed HCC/cholangiocarcinoma [one patient]) and liver metastases (four patients: untyped islet cell tumor [two patients], gastrinoma [one patient], carcinoid [one patient]). Response to chemoembolization was determined by three assessments: MR response, serial imaging response, and clinical response. The appearance of MR response to chemoembolization was determined based on the correlation with clinical and serial imaging response. The MR response of lesions that showed good clinical response included: increase in signal intensity on T1-weighted images (three patients), decrease in signal intensity on T2-weighted images (three patients), and negligible or minimal enhancement on immediate postgadolinium images (four patients) after chemoembolization. The most marked change in lesion appearance was observed in lesions < 1 cm, which had intense homogeneous enhancement on pretreatment MR studies and negligible enhancement on initial posttreatment MR examinations. MR response of lesions that showed moderate clinical response demonstrated a variety of lesion appearances from substantial change to minimal change. MR response of lesions that showed poor clinical response demonstrated no change in lesion appearances compared with the pretreatment MR study. Our results demonstrated change in appearance of liver lesions between pre- and post-hepatic-arterial chemoembolization MR studies. MR response correlated with response determined by serial imaging studies and clinical findings.  相似文献   

2.
Our purpose was to identify the histologic types of malignant liver lesions with high signal intensity (SI) on T1-weighted images and to describe the MR imaging features. Thirteen patients with malignant liver lesions high in SI on T1-weighted images were studied with a 1.5-T MR imager using pre- and serial postcontrast spoiled gradient-echo (SGE) sequences (all patients), T2-weighted fat-suppressed spin-echo sequences (all patients), precontrast T1-weighted fat-suppressed spin-echo sequences (five studies in five patients), and precontrast out-of-phase SGE sequences (seven studies in six patients). Images were reviewed retrospectively to determine number of lesions; lesion size; SI of lesions on T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and fat-attenuated T1-weighted images; distribution of high SI in lesions on T1-weighted images; and tumor enhancement pattern. Seven patients had multiple tumors high in SI on T1-weighted images and six patients had solitary tumors. Seventy-two lesions were less than 1.5 cm in diameter and 35 lesions were more than 1.5 cm in diameter. Nine patients had solid malignant lesions and four patients had cystic malignant lesions. All tumors more than 1.5 cm in diameter were heterogeneously high in SI on T1-weighted images, and all tumors less than 1.5 cm were completely homogeneous or homogeneous with a small central hypointense focus. All tumors were more conspicuous on T1-weighted fat-attenuated images, both on excitation spoiled fat-suppressed spin-echo or on out-of-phase SGE images with the exception of one fat-containing hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In one patient with melanoma metastases and one patient with multiple myeloma nodules, appreciably more lesions were detected on out-of-phase SGE images. Causes of hyperintensity were considered to be either fat, melanin, central hemorrhage, or high protein content, all of which may be seen in a variety of tumors. Fat-attenuation techniques are helpful in the detection of these lesions.  相似文献   

3.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the spectrum of appearances of gastrointestinal carcinoid tumors at magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and to elucidate patterns of appearances of carcinoid liver metastases on precontrast and postgadolinium images. The MR examinations of 29 patients (11 men, 18 women; age range, 33-87 years) with histologically confirmed gastrointestinal carcinoid tumors, representing our complete 9.5 years of experience with this entity, were retrospectively reviewed. Twelve patients had MR examinations prior to resection or biopsy of the primary tumor (preoperative group); 17 patients were imaged postsurgically (postoperative group). All MR studies were performed at 1.5 T and comprised T1-weighted spoiled gradient echo (SGE), T2-weighted fat-suppressed turbo spin echo, HASTE, and serial postgadolinium T1-weighted SGE sequences without and with fat suppression. Morphology, signal intensity, and contrast enhancement of primary tumors and of metastases to the mesentery, peritoneum, and liver were evaluated. Primary tumors were visualized in 8 of 12 patients and best demonstrated on postgadolinium T1-weighted fat-suppressed images. The appearance of primary tumors was a nodular mass originating from the bowel wall (4 of 12 patients) or regional uniform bowel wall thickening (4 of 12 patients) with moderate intense enhancement on postgadolinium images. In 4 of 12 patients the primary tumor was prospectively not seen. Mesenteric metastases, seen in eight patients, presented as nodular masses and were associated with mesenteric stranding in seven patients. A total of 156 liver metastases were evaluated in 16 patients. On precontrast T1- and T2-weighted images, 117 metastases (75%) were hypointense and hyperintense, respectively. A total of 146 metastases (94%) were hypervascular, showing moderate intense enhancement during the hepatic arterial phase, and 9 metastases (6%) were hypovascular. Twenty-three metastases (15%) were visible only on immediate postgadolinium images. MRI is able to demonstrate findings in carcinoid tumors, including the primary tumor, mesenteric metastases, and liver metastases. Liver metastases are commonly hypervascular and may be demonstrable only on immediate postgadolinium images.  相似文献   

4.
This study was devoted to tumor differentiation in liver MR T1-weighted imaging with superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO). Twenty-one patients with 40 liver lesions were studied at 1.5 T. Before and at least 45 minutes after SPIO administration, turbo-field-echo (TFE) T1-weighted, TFE T1 × T2*-weighted (MXT), and fat-suppressed turbo-spin-echo T2-weighted images were acquired. A quantitative analysis was performed blindly. On TFE T1-weighted images, the signal enhancement was ?33% ± 12 for the liver, ?24% ± 2 for adenomas and focal nodular hyperplasia, +60% ± 33 for the hemangiomas; metastases and cyst enhancement were not significant. After SPIO on TFE T1-weighted images, the hemangioma-to-liver signal ratio (149% ± 18) was definitely higher than the mean metastasis-to-liver signal ratio (90% ± 16). This T1-related differentiation ability lacked dramatically on TFE MXT images and, in one case, was reduced on post-SPIO TFE T1-weighted images by a long imaging delay after SPIO administration (2 hours).  相似文献   

5.

Objective

To determine the potential value of distributional-phase T1-weighted ferumoxides-enhanced magnetic resonance (MR) imaging for tissue characterization of focal liver lesions.

Materials and Methods

Ferumoxides-enhanced MR imaging was performed using a 1.5-T system in 46 patients referred for evaluation of known or suspected hepatic malignancies. Seventy-three focal liver lesions (30 hepatocellular carcinomas [HCC], 12 metastases, 15 cysts, 13 hemangiomas, and three cholangiocarcinomas) were evaluated. MR imaging included T1-weighted double-echo gradient-echo (TR/TE: 150/4.2 and 2.1 msec), T2*-weighted gradient-echo (TR/TE: 180/12 msec), and T2-weighted turbo spin-echo MR imaging at 1.5 T before and after intravenous administration of ferumoxides (15 mmol/kg body weight). Postcontrast T1-weighted imaging was performed within eight minutes of infusion of the contrast medium (distributional phase). Both qualitative and quantitative analysis was performed.

Results

During the distributional phase after infusion of ferumoxides, unique enhancement patterns of focal liver lesions were observed for hemangiomas, metastases, and hepatocellular carcinomas. On T1-weighted GRE images obtained during the distributional phase, hemangiomas showed a typical positive enhancement pattern of increased signal; metastases showed ring enhancement; and hepatocellar carcinomas showed slight enhancement. Quantitatively, the signal-to-noise ratio of hemangiomas was much higher than that of other tumors (p < .05) and was similar to that of intrahepatic vessels. This finding permitted more effective differentiation between hemangiomas and other malignant tumors.

Conclusion

T1-weighted double-echo FLASH images obtained soon after the infusion of ferumoxides, show characteristic enhancement patterns and improved the differentiation of focal liver lesions.  相似文献   

6.
The purpose of this study was to determine the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features of pyogenic hepatic abscesses on T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and serial gadolinium (Gd)-enhanced T1-weighted spoiled gradient-echo (SGE) images including images acquired in the immediate, intermediate, and late phases of enhancement. The MRI studies of 20 patients with pyogenic liver abscesses were retrospectively reviewed. All patients were examined on 1.5 (n = 19) and 1.0 (n = 1) T MR scanners. MR studies included T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and serial Gd-enhanced SGE images. The following determinations were made: signal intensity of the abscess cavity and perilesional liver tissue, and the presence of internal septations, layering material, or air in the abscess cavity. The pattern of enhancement of the abscess wall, internal septae and peri-abscess liver were evaluated on serial Gd-enhanced SGE images. A total of 53 abscesses were observed in the 20 patients. Fortyeight abscesses were hypointense on T1-weighted and hyperintense on T2-weighted images. Internal septations were present in four abscesses. Lower signal intensity material was observed in a dependent location on T2-weighted images in one abscess. Signal void foci of air located on the nondependent surface was observed in two abscesses. Two other abscesses contained signal void air that occupied the entire abscess cavity, observed on all imaging sequences. On serial gadolinium-enhanced images, all abscesses revealed early enhancement of the wall, which persisted with negligible change in degree of enhancement or thickness on delayed images. Abscess walls ranged in thickness from 2 to 5 mm. Internal septations ranged in thickness from 2 to 3 mm. Abscess walls and septations were relatively uniform in thickness with no evidence of focal nodularity. Periabscess liver tissue was mildly hypointense on T1-weighted and mildly hyperintense on T2-weighted images in 20 lesions, which were either circumferential (n = 12) or wedge-shaped (n = 8). All these regions enhanced more than the remainder of the liver on immediate post-gadolinium images and remained relatively hyperintense on late phase images. Periabscess liver parenchyma was isointense on both T1- and T2-weighted images in 18 lesions, and in these lesions wedge-shaped subsegmental (n = 6) or segmental (n = 12) enhancement was observed on immediate gadolinium-enhanced images, which faded to isointensity on intermediate phase images. No perilesional signal changes and enhancement difference was observed in 15 lesions. Characteristic features of abscesses include: intense mural enhancement on early gadolinium-enhanced images, which persists with negligible change in thickness and intensity on later post-gadolinium images, and the presence of periabscess increased enhancement on immediate post-gadolinium images. These MRI features may help to distinguish abscesses from other focal liver lesions during differential diagnosis.  相似文献   

7.
We describe the magnetic resonance (MR) findings in patients with gastrointestinal polyposis syndromes using breath-hold T1-weighted sequences, both standard and with fat suppression, prior to and following gadolinium administration, and breathing-independent single-shot half-Fourier RARE T2-weighted sequences. Six patients with gastrointestinal polyposis syndromes underwent MR examination to investigate for the presence of metastatic disease. The appearances of the gastrointestinal polyps on noncontrast T1-weighted spoiled gradient-echo (SGE), T2-weighted (half-Fourier RARE) images, and early and late gadolinium-enhanced SGE images were determined. Other gastrointestinal findings and extragastrointestinal disease were also evaluated. Patients with the following gastrointestinal polyposis syndromes were included: familial polyposis (n = 3), Peutz-Jeghers syndrome (n = 1), Gardner's syndrome (n = 1), and neurofibromatosis (n = 1). Polypoid lesions in all patients exhibited signal intensity comparable to bowel on noncontrast images and enhanced similar to bowel on early and late gadolinium-enhanced images. Polyps larger than 2 cm, observed in one patient with familial polyposis and the patient with Gardner's disease, showed mild heterogeneity on late gadolinium-enhanced fat-suppressed images. Multiple colonic polyps ranging from 5 mm to 3 cm in diameter were observed in patients with familial adenomatous polyposis. A solitary 1.5 cm polyp associated with entero-enteric intussusception was observed in the patient with Peutz-Jeghers syndrome. Gastric polyps ranging from 5 mm to 6 cm were observed in the stomach of the patient with Gardner's syndrome. Duodenal and jejunal neurofibromas ranging from 1 to 2 cm in diameter were present in the patient with neurofibromatosis. Extra gastrointestinal findings included an adrenal adenoma (1 patient), a pheochromocytoma (1 patient), and liver metastases (2 patients). Gastrointestinal polyps in patients with polyposis syndromes may be visualized on MR images employing breath-hold T1-weighted and breathing-independent snapshot T2-weighted techniques. Appreciation of polyp enhancement on post-gadolinium images is an important finding, which should help distinguish polyps from bowel contents.  相似文献   

8.
PURPOSE: To investigate the usefulness of early and delayed hepatic MRI after mangafodipir trisodium (Mn-DPDP) administration for the detection and characterization of focal hepatic lesions. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Forty-five patients (31 males and 14 females, mean age = 61 years) with a total of 113 hepatic lesions (mean size = 3.5 cm) were included in this study (15 with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC, N = 35), 20 with hepatic metastasis (N = 63), five with hemangioma (N = 10), three with cholangiocarcinoma (CC, N = 3), and two with liver abscess (N = 2)). T1-weighted gradient-echo MR images were obtained before and after Mn-DPDP administration, with a mean 18-hour delayed imaging. A qualitative analysis (including the size and signal intensity (SI)) and quantitative analysis (including enhancement and lesion-liver contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR)) were performed on pre- and postcontrast early and delayed MR images. RESULTS: Compared to postcontrast early imaging, 17 (48.6%) of 35 HCCs showed higher SI, 16 (45.7%) showed no SI change, and two (5.7%) showed lower SI on delayed imaging. All 63 metastases, 10 hemangiomas, three CCs, and two abscesses showed no SI change. On delayed imaging, ring enhancement was noted in 53 metastases (84.1%), three hemangiomas (30.0%), and one abscess (50.0%), but was not seen in HCCs or CCs. Eight metastases (12.7%) also showed ring enhancement on postcontrast early imaging. No newly detected hepatic lesions were revealed on postcontrast delayed MR images compared to postcontrast early images. Regarding CNR, the HCCs showed a significant increase in CNR from postcontrast early to delayed images after administration of Mn-DPDP (P < 0.01). However, none of the metastases, hemangiomas, CCs, and abscesses showed a significant increase of CNR from postcontrast early to delayed images. CONCLUSION: Postcontrast delayed MR images after Mn-DPDP administration were helpful in distinguishing hepatocellular from nonhepatocellular lesions, but were not useful for lesion detection and had limited utility for lesion characterization, since benign and malignant hepatic lesions looked the same.  相似文献   

9.
The authors reviewed their 21/2-year experience with a magnetic resonance (MR) imaging protocol for a 1.5-T MR imager that included T2-weighted fat-suppressed spin-echo, T1-weighted breath-hold gradient-echo, and serial dynamic gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted gradient-echo imaging to identify histologic types of malignant liver lesions more apparent on T1- than on T2-weighted images. MR images of 212 consecutive patients with malignant liver lesions were reviewed. T2-weighted, T1-weighted, and dynamic contrast-enhanced T1-weighted images were examined separately in a blinded fashion. Seven patients demonstrated liver lesions (lymphoma [two patients] and carcinoid, hepatocellular carcinoma, colon adenocarcinoma, transitional cell carcinoma, and melanoma [one patient each]) on T1-weighted images that were inconspicuous on T2-weighted images. In all cases, the lesions were most conspicuous on T1-weighted images obtained immediately after administration of contrast agent. Histologic confirmation was present for all seven patients. The consistent feature among these lesions was that they were hypovascular, due either to a fibrous stroma or to dense monoclonal cellularity. These results suggest that in some patients with hypovascular primary neoplasms, the lesions may be identified only on T1-weighted images, and that immediate postcontrast T1-weighted images are of particular value in demonstrating lesions.  相似文献   

10.
PURPOSE: To evaluate the diagnostic capability of breath-hold, multisection fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) imaging using a half-Fourier acquisition single-shot turbo spin-echo (HASTE) sequence in combination with T2-weighted fast spin-echo (FSE) magnetic resonance (MR) sequences for small hepatic lesions found on CT in patients with malignancy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study included 48 patients with extrahepatic malignancy who underwent both CT and MR examinations. There were a total of 112 small hepatic lesions (73 cysts and 39 liver metastases, <2 cm in diameter) that showed low attenuation on enhanced CT. Three radiologists independently reviewed the CT and MR (FLAIR-HASTE and T2-weighted FSE) images and assigned a confidence level to their evaluation (cyst or metastasis) on a five-point scale. RESULTS: All three reviewers were significantly better able (P < 0.05) to differentiate small hepatic cyst from liver metastasis with combined FLAIR-HASTE and T2-weighted FSE images (Az values = 0.997-0.999) than with CT (0.917-0.932). The mean values of sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were significantly higher (P < 0.001) for T2-weighted FSE with FLAIR-HASTE (96.6%, 96.8%, and 96.7%, respectively) than for CT (76.9%, 61.6%, and 67.3%, respectively). A confident diagnosis was rendered in 12 of 112 lesions (10.7%) on the basis of CT, and this rate increased to 83 of 112 (74.1%) on the basis of T2-weighted FSE and FLAIR-HASTE imaging. CONCLUSION: FLAIR-HASTE is considered to be an effective sequence for differentiating hepatic cysts from liver metastases without the use of a contrast agent. With FLAIR-HASTE one can confidently diagnose small hepatic lesions found on CT in patients with a malignancy.  相似文献   

11.
The purpose of this study was to describe the magnetic resonance (MR) imaging features of biliary hamartomas on T1- and T2-weighted and gadolinium-enhanced sequences, and to correlate these findings with histopathology. MR imaging findings in four patients with pathologically proved biliary hamartomas are described. In all patients, MR imaging sequences, including T1- and T2-weighted and early and late gadolinium-enhanced images, were retrospectively evaluated for the size, morphology, signal intensity, and enhancement pattern of the lesions. Correlation was made between the MR imaging findings and histopathology. Biliary hamartomas ranged in diameter from 0.5 to 1.5 cm. Lesions were solitary in one patient and numerous in three patients. In all patients, the lesions were low signal on T1-weighted images and high signal and well-defined on T2-weighted images and demonstrated thin rim enhancement on early post-gadolinium images that persisted on late post-gadolinium images. No appreciable central enhancement of the lesions was observed. At histopathology, the lesions were composed of cystic spaces and fibrous stroma. Lesions showed compressed liver parenchyma surrounding the lesions (three cases) and inflammatory cell infiltrate (one case), which correlated with the rim enhancement on the gadolinium-enhanced MR images. Most of the biliary hamartomas in our small series were less than 1 cm in diameter and of high signal intensity on T2-weighted images, and had a thin rim of enhancement on early and late post-gadolinium images. The imaging features were explainable by the underlying histopathology. In patients with known malignancy, caution should be exercised not to misinterpret these lesions as metastases due to the presence of thin rim enhancement. J. Magn. Reson Imaging 1999;10:196-201, 1999.  相似文献   

12.
The purpose of our study was to evaluate the potential value of ferumoxide-enhanced T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) imaging for tissue characterization of focal liver lesions when combined with T2-weighted sequences. Images were acquired within 30 minutes after the end of ferumoxide administration, when ferrite particles were not totally cleared from the intravascular compartment. Thirty-eight patients with 47 focal liver lesions underwent T1-weighted gradient-echo (TR/TE 150/4.1 msec) and T2-weighted fast spin-echo (3180-8638/90 msec) MR imaging at 1.5 T before and after intravenous administration of ferumoxides (10 micromol/kg body weight). A qualitative and quantitative analysis was performed. During the early phase after infusion of ferumoxide, blood vessels showed hypersignal intensity on T1-weighted fast low-angle shot (FLASH) images, while liver signal decreased. Hemangiomas showed both homogeneous and inhomogeneous enhancement patterns, and liver metastasis most typically showed ring enhancement. Hypervascular tumors (hepatocellular carcinomas and focal nodular hyperplasias) showed a slight degree of homogeneous enhancement. Quantitatively, the degree of enhancement and lesion-to-liver contrast on ferumoxide-enhanced images were significantly different among these tumors. Our results demonstrate that distinct enhancement patterns obtained on ferumoxide-enhanced T1-weighted MR imaging improve tissue characterization of focal liver lesions when combined with T2-weighted images.  相似文献   

13.
This study describes the occurrence of hemorrhage in renal cancer in patients with chronic renal insufficiency as shown on MR images. Thirteen consecutive patients with chronic renal insufficiency who had his tologically proven renal cancer and underwent MRI at 1.5 T were entered in the study. MR examinations included spoiled gradient echo (SGE) and T1-weighted fat-suppressed imaging pre- and postgadolinium administration. All renal cancers were well shown on MR images and were most clearly depicted on postgadolinium T1-weighted fat-suppressed images. Tumors in 12 of 13 patients had regions of high signal intensity on precontrast T1-weighted images. Histology demonstrated intratumoral hemorrhage in all 12 of these patients. Four hemorrhagic tumors were largely cystic on imaging studies. One of these cancers altered in appearance from largely cystic with extensive hemorrhage to largely solid with substantial enhancement after a 2.5-year interval. Renal cancers demonstrated minimal enhancement (11 patients) on early postgadolinium images and were minimally enhanced on delayed images in 10 of 13 tumors. Two renal cancers demonstrated intense enhancement. Renal cancers are well shown on MR images in patients with chronic renal insufficiency. Because of the common occurrence of hemorrhage into renal cancers in patients with renal insufficiency, caution should be exercised when evaluating hemorrhagic cystic lesions in these patients.  相似文献   

14.
Spectrum of MRI appearances of untreated metastases of the liver   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of our study was to identify the spectrum of MRI appearances of untreated liver metastases from different primary origins. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Over a period of 52 months, we used our clinical information system to retrospectively identify the first MRIs obtained in 165 consecutive patients who had untreated liver metastases. All patients had histologic confirmation of the primary tumor. Liver metastases were confirmed at histologic examination, on imaging, or at clinical follow-up. MR sequences used included T1-weighted spoiled gradient-echo, T2-weighted half-Fourier acquisition single-shot turbo spin-echo, and serial gadolinium-enhanced spoiled gradient-echo imaging. Size, signal intensity characteristics, and pattern of enhancement of the metastases on MRIs were evaluated by two radiologists in consensus. Lesions were categorized by size: smaller than 1.5 cm, between 1.5 and 3.0 cm, and larger than 3.0 cm. RESULTS: A total of 516 metastases (size range, 5-120 mm; mean, 28 mm) were assessed. Fifty-nine patients had hypervascular lesions, and 106 patients had hypovascular lesions. A significant difference in proportion of tumor vascularity was observed between the primary tumors described as classically hypervascular and those described as classically hypovascular (chi-square test for proportions of 70.8, p < 0.0001). The most common pattern was peripheral ring (72% of patients) seen on the arterial dominant phase images, with incomplete central progression (63%) seen on the delayed phase images. A hypointense ring seen in the periphery of the tumor during the delayed phase was the most common appearance in hypervascular metastases (27% patients) and was particularly conspicuous in patients with neuroendocrine and carcinoid tumors. Perilesional enhancement was common (47%), mostly seen in hypovascular metastases (92%). Generally, large lesions tended to show a peripheral ring or heterogeneous enhancement, and small lesions showed homogeneous enhancement. CONCLUSION: MRI allows the identification of a wide spectrum of appearances of untreated liver metastases. The extent and pattern of enhancement of various histologic types of tumor are depicted on MRI.  相似文献   

15.

Purpose

To determine characteristic magnetic resonance (MR) imaging features of solitary necrotic nodule of the liver.

Materials and methods

MR images features of thirty-two patients (17 men, 15 women; mean age, 43 years; range, 24–76 years) with pathologically proved solitary necrotic nodule of the liver were retrospectively analyzed for number, size, signal intensity features and enhancement patterns.

Results

A total of 33 lesions were identified. The mean diameter was 2.3 cm (range 1.0–4.5 cm). Thirty lesions (90.9%) were 1.0–3.0 cm in diameter and only 3 lesions (9.1%) were larger than 3.0 cm. On T1-weighted images, solitary necrotic nodule of the liver appeared hypointense in 31 lesions (93.9%) and isointense in 2 lesions (6.1%). On T2-weighted images, 12 (36.4%) lesions were hyperintense, 15 (45.4%) were isointense or invisible and 6 (18.2%) were hypointense. After injection of gadopentetate dimeglumine, all lesions were hypointense and none of them showed enhancement.

Conclusion

Solitary necrotic nodule of the liver is usually small with the size not exceed 3.0 cm in diameter. Absence of enhancement on all dynamic phase after gadopentetate dimeglumine administration may be most characteristic feature of solitary necrotic nodule of the liver on MR images, which may help discriminate this entity from metastatic liver tumors and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma.  相似文献   

16.
Small nodular lesions in the liver and spleen have been reported as an infrequent manifestation of sarcoidosis. Five patients with this appearance on either dynamic contrast material—enhanced computed tomographic (CT) or ultrasound scans underwent magnetic resonance (MR) imaging with and without dynamic gadolinium enhancement. The lesions were relatively uniform in size, ranging from 0.5 to 1.5 cm. On CT scans, they were hypoattenuating relative to surrounding parenchyma. On MR images, the lesions were hypointense relative to background parenchyma with all sequences. No substantial enhancement was observed in the lesions, although lesion conspicuity decreased over time on serial postcontrast images. Lesion conspicuity was greatest on either T2-weighted fat-suppressed (T2FS) images or early-phase dynamic contrast-enhanced images. Abdominal adenopathy was seen in three of the five patients and was hyperintense relative to liver on T2FS images in two and intermediate in intensity in one patient.  相似文献   

17.
The objective of this study was to demonstrate the appearance of ampullary carcinoma using current MR techniques, including fat suppression, gadolinium enhancement, and MR cholangiography. Nine patients with ampullary carcinoma were examined by MRI at 1.5 T. MR examinations included T1-weighted spoiled gradient echo, T1-weighted fat-suppressed, and immediate postgadolinium spoiled gradient echo images for all patients and MR cholangiography for three patients. The imaging features of ampullary carcinomas, including tumor size and morphology, signal intensity, and enhancement characteristics, were determined. Ampullary carcinomas shown on MR images ranged in size from 1.5 to 5.5 cm. Tumors were low in signal intensity on precontrast T1-weighted spoiled gradient echo and T1-weighted fat-suppressed images relative to normal pancreatic tissue and enhanced less than normal pancreas on immediate postgadolinium spoiled gradient echo images. Tumor conspicuity was greatest on immediate postgadolinium spoiled gradient echo images. MR cholangiography demonstrated high grade obstruction of the common bile duct and mild dilatation of the pancreatic duct at the level of the ampulla with abrupt termination of the ducts in two untreated patients and moderate dilatation of the common bile duct in one patient who had a biliary stent. Ampullary carcinomas can be demonstrated on MR images as small masses arising at the ampulla. Tumors are well defined on immediate postgadolinium spoiled gradient echo images.  相似文献   

18.
Our objective was to describe MR imaging findings of liver lesions in human fascioliasis. The MR imaging of the liver was performed in 29 patients with fascioliasis. Seventeen patients were women and 12 were men, with a mean age of 47.5 years (age range 17–75 years). Hepatic lesions were grouped into five types based on their signal characteristics. Three patients had normal imaging findings. One or more lesions were observed in the other 26 patients. The lesion types and the frequency of appearances were as follows: hyperintensity of the liver capsule on T2-weighted images (n=16, 55.2%); ill-defined slightly hyperintense areas on T2-weighted images (n=18, 62.1%); lesions which were hypointense on T1-weighted and hyperintense on T2-weighted images (n=10, 34.5%); hypointense on T1-weighted images and centrally hypo- or hyperintense, surrounded by peripherally less hyperintense area on T2-weighted images (n=4, 13.8%); and hypointense foci or ill-defined hypointense areas on T1- and T2-weighted images (n=10, 34.5%). We describe the MR imaging features of the disease. Our findings may help the differential diagnosis in which fascioliasis should be added to the list. Electronic Publication  相似文献   

19.
To identify changes induced by chemotherapy in hepatic metastases, 34 patients with metastases underwent magnetic resonance (MR) imaging before the start of systemic chemotherapy and monthly thereafter. The number, size, and morphologic patterns of the lesions and changes in quantitative parameters (signal-to-noise ratio [S/N], contrast-to-noise ratio, and signal intensity ratio) were evaluated and correlated with response to treatment and prognosis. After treatment, seven patients showed a partial response, 18 had stable disease, and nine had progressive disease. No relevant changes in the patterns of the lesions were observed. Quantitative data showed that patients with a good prognosis had an increase in S/N on T1-weighted images and a relative decrease on T2-weighted images; patients with a poor prognosis showed a decrease in S/N on T1-weighted images and an increase on T2-weighted images. The differences between patient groups were significant for both T1- and T2- weighted images. This study demonstrates the value of MR imaging in follow-up of liver metastases and suggests the usefulness of quantitative MR imaging data.  相似文献   

20.
This study demonstrates the appearance of small bowel tumors on MR images. Sixteen patients with tumors involving small bowel were studied by MRI. All tumors were proven with histopathology. Eleven patients had primary tumors of the small bowel, which included the following: four carcinoid tumors, three adenocarcinomas, two lymphomas, one leiomyosarcoma, and one leiomyoma. Five patients had recurrent or metastatic disease to small bowel: two patients had colon cancer, one patient had pancreatic cancer, one patient had uterine leiomyosarcoma, and one patient had chloroma (leukemia). MR examination included breath-hold T1-weighted spoiled gradient echo (all patients), immediate postgadolinium-spoiled gradient echo (10 patients), and 2 to 4 minutes postgadolinium T1-weighted, fat-suppressed images (all patients). Tumor size, local extent, signal intensity, and enhancement features of tumor and adjacent tissue were determined. Tumor ranged in diameter from 1 to 9 cm (mean, 4.0 cm). Tumors had similar signal intensity to normal small bowel on precontrast images. Fourteen malignant tumors showed heterogeneous enhancement greater than adjacent bowel on gadolinium-enhanced images. Tumor local extent was best shown on precontrast-spoiled gradient-echo images and postgadolinium T1-weighted fat-suppressed images. Image quality was most consistent on breath-hold images. The results of this study show that small bowel tumors are demonstrable on MR images. Precontrast breath-hold T1-weighted spoiled gradient-echo images and gadolinium-enhanced fat suppressed images demonstrate tumor extent most reliably.  相似文献   

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