| Literature DB >> 34698296 |
Pierre Chagué1,2, Antoine Marchi1, Alix Fechner1,2, Ghina Hindawi3, Hadrien Tranchart2,4, Julie Carrara2,5, Alexandre J Vivanti2,5, Laurence Rocher1,2,6.
Abstract
Background: non-hemorrhagic adrenal infarction (NHAI) is a rare cause of acute abdominal/flank pain during pregnancy; in order to ensure prompt and appropriate treatment, this diagnosis should not be overlooked. This case series highlights pertinent imaging findings, including ultrasounds (USs), computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of recent NHAI cases.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; abdominal pain in pregnancy; adrenal infarction; adrenal ischemia; adrenal thrombosis; management; non-hemorrhagic adrenal infarction
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34698296 PMCID: PMC8544682 DOI: 10.3390/tomography7040046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tomography ISSN: 2379-1381
Demographic data and findings.
| Patient | Age | Gravidity and Parity | Gest. Age | Clinical Presentation/Initial Suspected Diagnosis | Laboratory Findings | Imaging Findings | Side | Treatment | Imaging Follow-Up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 33y | G4P3 | 37w | Right-sided abdominal pain/appendicitis | Leukocytosis: 19x10*9/L, CRP: 49 mg/L, D-dimer: 1070 ng/mL | Right | After giving birth, Oral anticoagulation and antiplatelet during 11 months | CT at 3 and 7 months: Atrophic adrenal with partially restored glandular enhancement | |
| 2 | 38y | G3P1 | 26w | history of kidney stone/Right back flank pain/renal colic | Leukocytosis: 20x10*9/L, CRP: 17 mg/L | US: no abnormality | Right | Heparin and then oral anticoagulation during 6 months | MRI at 1 month and CT-enhanced at 3 months: Atrophic adrenal with partially restored glandular enhancement |
| 3 | 19y | G1P0/twin pregnancy | 32w | Previous left acute obstructive pyelonephritis during the same pregnancy/right back flank pain/renal colic/ | Leukocytosis: 18x10*9/L, CRP: 82 mg/L | US: Pyelocaliceal dilatation and kidney stones | Right | Heparin injection follow by oral anticoagulation for 3 months | CT at 3 months: isolated residual atrophy of the lateral arm of the gland |
| 4 | 34y | G1P0 | 31w | Right upper quadrant pain/hepatic colic or pulmonary embolism | Leukocytosis: 15x10*9/L, CRP: 25 mg/L, D-dimer: 1500 ng/L | US: No abnormality | Right | Heparin injection during the pregnancy | MRI at one week: no change. MRI at one month: Appearance of T1-weighted hyperintensity |
| 5 | 31y | G3P0 | 36w | Left upper back and low back chest pain/ pulmonary embolism | Leukocytosis: 12.4x10*9/L, CRP: 187 mg/L, D-dimer: 820 ng/L | Left | Heparin injection during the pregnancy | MRI at 4 months: swollen left adrenal gland. Collection decreased with partially restored glandular enhancement | |
| 6 | 22y | G1P0 | 30w | Left pain then one day later right flank pain/ appendicitis | Leukocytosis: 10.3x10*9/L, CRP: 52 mg/L | US: no abnormality | Right | Heparin injection during the pregnancy | No follow-up (recent case) |
* Retrospective analysis of ultrasound views indicated unusual visualization of the right adrenal gland. † Typical CT findings: enlarged and hypoenhanced appearance of the adrenal gland. ‡ Typical MRI findings: restricted diffusion of the gland, increased T2 signal intensity with surrounding edema without T1 hyperintensity. Gest: gestational.
Figure 1Ultrasound findings. (A): patient 1, enlarged right adrenal gland (white arrows); (B): patient 5, enlarged left adrenal gland (white arrows) associated with fluid collection (black arrow).
Figure 2Contrast-enhanced CT findings of NHAI. (A–C) Patient 2. A: enhanced dual source CT showing an enlarged unenhanced right adrenal gland (arrow). Normal appearance of the contralateral adrenal gland (arrowhead). (B) Fusion of virtual non-contrast CT and iodine overlay image, demonstrating more easily the non-enhanced pattern. (C) Sagittal view of contrast-enhanced CT, showing the tail of the adrenal vein thrombus extending into the inferior vena cava (arrow) and the enlarged unenhanced right adrenal gland (star). (D) Patient 4, enlargement of the right adrenal gland. (E) Patient 5, CT pulmonary angiogram showing enlargement of the left adrenal gland and infiltration of the adjacent fat. Normal appearance of the contralateral adrenal gland (arrowhead).
Figure 3Follow-up imaging CT findings. (A) Patient 2, residual atrophy of the right adrenal gland (arrow). Normal appearance of the contralateral adrenal gland (arrowhead). (B) Patient 1, contrast-enhanced CT showing partial enhancement of the right adrenal gland (arrow). Normal appearance of the contralateral adrenal gland (arrowhead). (C,D) Patient 3, coronal and sagittal view of contrast-enhanced CT showing atrophy of the lateral arm of the right adrenal gland (arrow). Normal appearance of the contralateral adrenal gland (arrowhead).
Figure 4MRI findings of patient 3. (A,B) T2-weighted MR imaging, coronal (A) and axial (B) planes showing edema of the right adrenal gland (arrow) and adjacent fat. No abnormality of the contralateral gland (arrowhead). (C) Unenhanced axial T1-weighted imaging showing no hyperintensity of the adrenal gland (arrow). (D) Diffusion-weighted MR imaging (b800) showing restricted diffusion of the adrenal gland (arrow).
Figure 5MRI findings of patient 3. (A) Diffusion-weighted MR imaging (b800) showing restricted diffusion of the adrenal gland (arrow). No abnormality of the contralateral gland (arrowhead). (B,C) Coronal and axial T2-weighted imaging, showing a fluid collection (arrow) beside the swollen left adrenal gland. The left hydronephrosis is chronic (history of urinary stones). (D) Axial unenhanced T1-weighted image, showing no hyperintensity of this fluid collection.
Figure 6MRI findings of patient 4. (A) Diffusion-weighted MR imaging (b800) showing heterogeneous restricted diffusion of the adrenal gland (arrow). (B) Axial T2-weighted imaging, showing an enlarged right adrenal gland (arrow) with intermediate hyperintensity. (C) Axial unenhanced T1-weighted image, showing no hyperintensity of the adrenal gland (arrow). (D) Follow-up MRI at one month. Axial unenhanced T1-weighted image, showing appearance of hyperintensity of the adrenal gland (arrow) attributed to a secondary hemorrhage.