| Literature DB >> 28672991 |
Minoru Tomizawa1, Fuminobu Shinozaki2, Satomi Tanaka2, Takafumi Sunaoshi2, Daisuke Kano2, Eriko Sugiyama2, Misaki Shite2, Ryouta Haga2, Yoshiya Fukamizu2, Toshiyuki Fujita2, Satoshi Kagayama2, Rumiko Hasegawa3, Yoshinori Shirai3, Yasufumi Motoyoshi4, Takao Sugiyama5, Shigenori Yamamoto6, Naoki Ishige7.
Abstract
Prompt and accurate diagnosis is critical in the treatment of acute cholecystitis. Diffusion-weighted whole-body magnetic resonance imaging with background body signal suppression/T2 image fusion (DWIBS/T2) identifies areas with high signal intensity, corresponding to inflammation. In the present study, the records and images of patients with acute cholecystitis who underwent DWIBS/T2 between January 2013 and March 2014 were retrospectively analyzed. A total of 11 patients with acute cholecystitis were enrolled. In one patient, DWIBS/T2 identified a thickened wall and high signal intensity, with high signal intensity in the pericholecystic space that suggested localized peritonitis. Positive DWIBS/T2 results indicating acute cholecystitis were obtained in 10/11 patients, with a sensitivity of 90.9%. In addition, wall thickening and high signal intensity were absent in DWIBS/T2 images when wall thickening was not detected by computed tomography. Wall thickening and high signal intensity was attenuated when patients with acute cholecystitis were clinically treated. These data suggest that a thickened gallbladder wall and high signal intensity are indicative of acute cholecystitis and that DWIBS/T2 may be a useful technique in evaluating the severity of acute cholecystitis.Entities:
Keywords: acute cholecystitis; sensitivity; severity
Year: 2017 PMID: 28672991 PMCID: PMC5488676 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2017.4561
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447