Pelvic floor dysfunctions involving some or all pelvic viscera are complex conditions that occur frequently and primarily affect adult women. Because abnormalities of the three pelvic compartments are frequently associated, a complete survey of the entire pelvis is necessary for optimal patient management, especially before surgical correction is attempted. With the increasing use of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in assessing functional disorders of the pelvic floor, familiarity with normal imaging findings and features of pathologic conditions are important for radiologists. Dynamic MR imaging of the pelvic floor is an excellent tool for assessing functional disorders of the pelvic floor such as pelvic organ prolapse, outlet obstruction, and incontinence. Findings reported at dynamic MR imaging of the pelvic floor are valuable for selecting patients who are candidates for surgical treatment and for choosing the appropriate surgical approach. This pictorial essay reviews MR imaging findings of pelvic organ prolapse, fecal incontinence, and obstructed defecation. Supplemental material available at http://radiographics.rsnajnls.org/cgi/content/full/e35v1/DC1.
MRI combined with dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI showed a higher sensitivity and specificity compared with MRI alone in detecting local recurrences after radical prostatectomy.
Our objective was to assess the diagnostic value of magnetic resonance enteroclysis (MRE) compared with conventional enteroclysis (CE) in patients with Crohn's disease. A secondary objective was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of each different MR sequence. Sixty-six consecutive patients with known Crohn's disease underwent MRE and CE. Fast imaging employing steady-state acquisition (FIESTA), single-shot fast spin-echo (ssFSE), and contrast-enhanced T1-weighted sequences were assessed by two radiologists who reached a consensus about the following findings: visualization of wall ulcers, pseudopolyps, fistulae, mural stenosis, and mesenteric abnormalities. Standard descriptive statistics and the McNemar test were used. The sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of MRE were 90-87% and 83% for the depiction of parietal ulcers, 84%-88% and 86% for pseudopolyps, 100-94% and 96% for mural stenosis, 93-100% and 94% for fistulae. The number of detected extraluminal findings was significantly higher with MRE (P < 0.01). The accuracy of FIESTA sequence was statistically higher in the depiction of wall ulcers and fistulae than that of three-dimensional fast spoiled gradient echo (3D-FSPGR) (P < 0.01) and ssFSE (P < 0.05) sequences. Contrast-enhanced 3D-FSPGR was superior for mural stenosis visualization compared to ssFSE (P < 0.05) and FIESTA (P < 0.05). MRE correlates accurately with CE in the detection of superficial and transmural abnormalities and has the advantage of assessing the mesenteric manifestations.
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