| Literature DB >> 35795597 |
Henrique Pavan1, Tiago Severo Garcia1, Felipe Soares Torres2, Fernando Ferreira Gazzoni1, Luciano Folador1, Caroline Lorenzoni Almeida Ghezzi1,3.
Abstract
Chest scans usually include the upper abdomen, leading radiologists to evaluate the upper abdominal structures. The aim of this article is to summarize the most common incidental upper abdominal findings that do not require further imaging or management in patients undergoing unenhanced computed tomography of the chest for the investigation of thoracic symptoms or diseases. We review common incidental findings of the liver, gallbladder, spleen, adrenal glands, kidney, and retroperitoneum, as well as findings that mimic other lesions. Thoracic radiologists should be aware of such typical findings and report when no further investigation is needed, thus avoiding unnecessary imaging examinations, protecting patients from additional medical interventions, and allaying patient concerns.Entities:
Keywords: Abdomen/diagnostic imaging; Diagnostic imaging; Incidental findings; Tomography; X-ray computed
Year: 2022 PMID: 35795597 PMCID: PMC9254702 DOI: 10.1590/0100-3984.2021.0106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Bras ISSN: 0100-3984
Current recommendations for upper abdominal findings on unenhanced CT that do not require follow-up imaging.
| Finding | Imaging features | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Hepatic cyst | Density ranging from -10 to 20 HU | No additional imaging required |
| Focal fat sparing and focal fatty deposition in the liver | Focal areas of decreased or increased density | No need for immediate invasive evaluation |
| Gallstones | CT approximately 80% sensitive for the detection of gallstones | In symptomatic patients, ultrasound indicated |
| Porcelain gallbladder | Focal or diffuse calcification of the gallbladder wall | No evidence supporting imaging follow-up; if followed, use contrast-enhanced CT |
| Dense gallbladder content | Hyperattenuating gallbladder (20-100 HU) | Clinical history valuable for determining the cause |
| Splenic cyst | Low attenuation (< 10 HU) | No additional imaging required |
| Lipid-rich adrenal adenoma | Attenuation ≤ 10 HU | No additional imaging required |
| Adrenal myelolipoma | Main diagnostic feature: macroscopic fat | No additional imaging required |
| Likely benign cyst | Well-defined homogeneous mass with density ranging from -9 HU to 20 HU | No additional imaging required |
| High-attenuation benign cyst | Well-defined homogeneous mass with a density ≥ 70 HU | No additional imaging required |
| Renal angiomyolipoma | Density of ≤ -10 HU due to macroscopic fat | In the absence of calcification, no further evaluation required for a fat-containing renal lesion < 4 cm in an asymptomatic patient |
| Suspicious lymph node | Elongated with a central fatty hilum | 1 cm cutoff accepted for retroperitoneal nodes |
| Gastric diverticulum | Fluid-filled or air-filled and usually near the gastric cardia | Often misdiagnosed as a left adrenal mass |
| Duodenal diverticulum | Pouch with an air-fluid level, typically in the medial wall of the second portion of the duodenum | May be misdiagnosed as a pancreatic mass |
Figure 1Digitally altered photograph showing common incidental upper abdominal findings that do not require further imaging.
Figure 2Chest CT of a 44-year-old male, showing a small, well-defined lesion (arrow) with low attenuation (≤ 20 HU), consistent with a hepatic cyst.
Figure 3Unenhanced axial CT showing diffuse fat deposition with focal sparing, adjacent to the gallbladder fossa (arrows).
Figure 4Unenhanced axial CT image showing a gallstone (arrow) in a patient with metastatic angiosarcoma.
Figure 5Chest CT of a 66-year-old female with porcelain gallbladder (arrow).
Figure 6A 52-year-old male with dyspnea. Unenhanced axial CT image showing hyperattenuating gallbladder content (arrow).
Figure 7A 36-year-old female. Chest CT, performed for the investigation of cervical lymphadenopathy, showing a splenic cyst (arrow).
Figure 8A 54-year-old male patient with Crohn’s disease. Axial oblique CT showing an adenoma (solid arrow) in the right adrenal gland and a myelolipoma (dashed arrow) in the left adrenal gland.
Figure 9Adrenal myelolipoma in a 60-year-old woman. Unenhanced axial CT image showing a mass containing macroscopic fat (arrow) in the left adrenal gland.
Figure 10A 67-year-old male with dyspnea. Chest CT showing a hyperdense renal cyst (arrow).
Figure 11A 39-year-old female with dyspnea. Chest CT showing a very low-density lesion (arrow) in the right kidney.
Figure 12A 65-year-old female with rheumatoid arthritis. Chest CT showing a gastric diverticulum (arrow).
Figure 13An 83-year-old female. Chest CT showing a duodenal diverticulum (arrow) discovered as an incidental finding after blunt chest trauma.