Literature DB >> 18430876

Autoimmune pancreatitis: CT patterns and their changes after steroid treatment.

Riccardo Manfredi1, Rossella Graziani, Calogero Cicero, Luca Frulloni, Giovanni Carbognin, William Mantovani, Roberto Pozzi Mucelli.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To retrospectively evaluate the computed tomographic (CT) patterns of autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP) and their changes after steroid therapy.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Investigational review board approval was obtained, and the informed consent requirement was waived. The medical and imaging data of 21 patients (13 men, eight women; mean age, 47.5 years; age range, 25-79 years) with histopathologically proved AIP who underwent contrast material-enhanced CT at diagnosis and after steroid treatment were included in this study. Image analysis included assessment of the (a) presence or absence and type (focal or diffuse) of pancreatic parenchyma enlargement, (b) contrast enhancement of pancreatic parenchyma, (c) size of the main pancreatic duct (MPD) within the lesion and upstream, and (d) pancreatic parenchyma thickness in the head, body, and tail of the pancreas. The same criteria were applied to follow-up CT examinations, the follow-up data were compared with pretreatment data, and a paired sample t test was applied.
RESULTS: Pancreatic parenchyma showed focal enlargement in 14 (67%) patients and diffuse enlargement in seven (33%). Pancreatic parenchyma affected by AIP appeared hypoattenuating in 19 (90%) patients and isoattenuating in two (10%). During the portal venous phase, pancreatic parenchyma showed contrast material retention in 18 (86%) patients and contrast material washout in three (14%). The MPD was never visible within the lesion. After treatment, there was a reduction in the size of pancreatic parenchyma segments affected by AIP (P < .05). Fifteen (71%) of the 21 patients had a normal enhancement pattern in the pancreatic parenchyma, whereas the enhancement pattern remained hypovascular in six (29%). The MPD returned to its normal size within the lesion in all patients at follow-up CT. In one of the eight patients with focal forms of AIP, the upstream MPD remained dilated.
CONCLUSION: AIP appeared as pancreatic parenchyma enlargement, with MPD stenosis within the lesion and upstream dilatation in focal forms of AIP. After steroid treatment, there was normalization of these findings. (c) RSNA, 2008.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18430876     DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2472070598

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiology        ISSN: 0033-8419            Impact factor:   11.105


  18 in total

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2.  Autoimmune pancreatitis: multidetector-row computed tomography (MDCT) and magnetic resonance (MR) findings in the Italian experience.

Authors:  Rossella Graziani; Simona Mautone; Maria Chiara Ambrosetti; Riccardo Manfredi; Thomas J Re; Lucia Calculli; Luca Frulloni; Roberto Pozzi Mucelli
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7.  Native T1 mapping of autoimmune pancreatitis as a quantitative outcome surrogate.

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8.  Autoimmune pancreatitis: imaging findings on contrast-enhanced MR, MRCP and dynamic secretin-enhanced MRCP.

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9.  Pancreatic duct abnormalities in focal autoimmune pancreatitis: MR/MRCP imaging findings.

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10.  New insight of pancreatic imaging: from "unexplored" to "explored".

Authors:  Hiromu Mori
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