| Literature DB >> 29423461 |
Christoph F Dietrich1, Michalakis Averkiou2, Michael Bachmann Nielsen3, Richard G Barr4, Peter N Burns5, Fabrizio Calliada6, Vito Cantisani7, Byung Choi8, Maria C Chammas9, Dirk-André Clevert10, Michel Claudon11, Jean-Michel Correas12, Xin-Wu Cui13, David Cosgrove14, Mirko D'Onofrio15, Yi Dong16, JohnR Eisenbrey17, Teresa Fontanilla18, Odd Helge Gilja19, Andre Ignee13, Christian Jenssen20, Yuko Kono21, Masatoshi Kudo22, Nathalie Lassau23, Andrej Lyshchik17, Maria Franca Meloni24, Fuminori Moriyasu25, Christian Nolsøe26, Fabio Piscaglia27, Maija Radzina28, Adrian Saftoiu29, Paul S Sidhu30, Ioan Sporea31, Dagmar Schreiber-Dietrich32, Claude B Sirlin33, Maria Stanczak17, Hans-Peter Weskott34, Stephanie R Wilson35, Juergen Karl Willmann36, Tae Kyoung Kim37, Hyun-Jung Jang37, Alexandar Vezeridis38, Sue Westerway39.
Abstract
"How to perform contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS)" provides general advice on the use of ultrasound contrast agents (UCAs) for clinical decision-making and reviews technical parameters for optimal CEUS performance. CEUS techniques vary between centers, therefore, experts from EFSUMB, WFUMB and from the CEUS LI-RADS working group created a discussion forum to standardize the CEUS examination technique according to published evidence and best personal experience. The goal is to standardise the use and administration of UCAs to facilitate correct diagnoses and ultimately to improve the management and outcomes of patients.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; guidelines; teaching; ultrasonography
Year: 2018 PMID: 29423461 PMCID: PMC5802984 DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-123931
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ultrasound Int Open ISSN: 2199-7152
Fig. 1Malignant focal liver lesions in healthy liver parenchyma show a variable arterial enhancement pattern according to their etiology (rim enhancement in the case of some metastases a and as decisive criteria hypoenhancement in the portal venous (sinusoidal and “liver specific”) phase in comparison to the surrounding liver parenchyma b .
Fig. 2Benign focal liver lesions in healthy liver parenchyma show a variable arterial enhancement pattern according to their etiology a and as decisive criteria iso- or hyper-enhancement in the portal venous (sinusoidal and “liver specific”) phase in comparison to the surrounding liver parenchyma b .
Fig. 3Time-intensity curve for a bolus injection in a tissue mimicking flow phantom. A lognormal curve (solid line) is fitted to the data and it is used to calculate the important quantification parameters (44) (PI, RT, MTT, and AUC).
Fig. 4Low gain setting results in underestimation of the microbubbles located in the microcirculation ( a ). The proper gain setting results in a correct display of microbubbles in both micro- and macrovessels ( b ). High gain results in signal oversaturation and the image is too bright making the distinction between macro and micro-vasculature more difficult ( c ).