| Literature DB >> 155617 |
U Scherer, J Lissner, B Brall, J Eisenburg, M Zrenner, F W Schildberg.
Abstract
To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of computerized tomography (CT) in detecting liver disease, CT-findings of 320 patients examined with a slow CT-scanner (2.5 min scanning time/slice) could be compared to the results of bioptic procedures. Sensitivity was 81% for circumscript liver disease, specificity was 85%. In 69% of the cases, a type-specific diagnosis of circumscript liver diseases was possible, this percentage increased by 5% if patients with a true-positive differential diagnosis were included. 73% of the patients with liver metastases were correctly identified to have metastatic liver disease. Obstructive jaundice was correctly identified in 77% and correctly excluded in all patients with medical jaundice. For a large variety of hepatocellular disease, ratio of true positive diagnoses was 16% only. The value of CT in hepatocellular disease concerns exclusion of presumed space-occupying lesions. In a control group of 310 patients with only "clinically" and not bioptically confirmed diagnoses, specificity was 96% and sensitivity concerning focal liver disease was 82%. Our results prove CT to be a valuable non-invasive tool in the evaluation of circumscript liver disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1979 PMID: 155617 DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1231325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rofo ISSN: 1438-9010