| Literature DB >> 28261535 |
Kaikai Wei1, Huifang Su1, Guofeng Zhou2, Rong Zhang1, Peiqiang Cai1, Yi Fan3, Chuanmiao Xie1, Baowei Fei4, Zhenfeng Zhang1.
Abstract
A solitary pulmonary nodule is defined as radiographic lesion with diameters no more than 3 cm and completely surrounded by normal lung tissue. It is commonly encountered in clinical practice and its diagnosis is a big challenge. Medical imaging, as a non-invasive approach, plays a crucial role in the diagnosis of solitary pulmonary nodules since the potential morbidity of surgery and the limits of biopsy. Advanced hardware, image acquisition and analysis technologies have led to the utilization of imaging towards quantitative imaging. With the aim of mining more useful information from image data, radiomics with high-throughput extraction can play a useful role. This article is to introduce the current state of radiomics studies and describe the general procedures. Another objective of this paper is to discover the feasibility and potential of radiomics methods on differentiating solitary pulmonary nodules and to look into the future direction of radiomics in this area.Entities:
Keywords: Differentiation; Pulmonary nodules; Radiomics
Year: 2016 PMID: 28261535 PMCID: PMC5336142 DOI: 10.4172/2167-7964.1000218
Source DB: PubMed Journal: OMICS J Radiol ISSN: 2167-7964
Figure 1Radiomics is a comprehensive subject that trying to extract information from anatomic structure to molecular structure, it is at the centre of diagnosissurveillances and therapeutic planning.
Radiographic characteristics used in differentiating pulmonary nodules.
| Characteristics | Modalities | Conclusion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Size | CT | Nodule size larger than 2 cm in | MacMahon et al. [ |
| Morphology | CT | A nodule with an irregular or | Erasmus et al. [ |
| Attenuation | CT | Higher SUVmax | Ohno et al. [ |
DWI: Diffusion Weighted Imaging; FDG-PET: Fluorodeoxyglucose-Position Emission Tomography; ADC: Apparent Diffusion Coefficient; SUV: Standardized Uptake Value; LSR: signal–intensity ratios between lesion and spinal cord.