| Literature DB >> 26430572 |
Faiq Shaikh1, Omer Awan2, Salman A Khan3.
Abstract
Gallbladder adenocarcinoma is an uncommon and serious disease. The primary disease grows rapidly with local invasion into the liver and with distant spread to lymph nodes. It is often detected late, due to which management can be challenging. Despite routine use of computed tomography (CT) and ultrasonography (US) for detection, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is often considered for a detailed assessment of the anatomic behavior of these tumors. We share three cases where 18-FDG PET/CT played a role in management thereof.Entities:
Keywords: PET/CT; fdg pet; gallbladder adenocarcinoma; mri
Year: 2015 PMID: 26430572 PMCID: PMC4565728 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1FDG-PET/CT and abdominal MRI
PET/CT images demonstrate an irregular hypodense left hepatic lobe lesion, right posterior pleural-based density, deposits in the midline anterior abdominal cavity adjacent to the umbilical port site, soft tissue density in the subcutaneous tissue of the anterior abdominal wall superficial to the umbilicus, a poorly-circumscribed infiltrative epigastric mass with a centrally located biliary stent and multiple lymph nodes in the left supraclavicular station with increased FDG uptake (see arrows). The abdominal coronal T1-weighted VIBE MR images demonstrate a low-intensity left hepatic lobe lesion that is also seen as an infiltrative mass on axial MR images (see arrow).
Figure 2FDG-PET/CT and abdominal MRI
The PET-CT study demonstrates an infiltrative right inferior hepatic lobe lesion with increased FDG activity (see arrow). There is increased T1 signal with heterogeneous increased T2 signal and heterogeneous post-contrast enhancement on axial T1-weighted VIBE images (see arrow).
Figure 3FDG-PET/CT
These images demonstrate increased FDG uptake in the primary lesion infiltrating the liver.