CT and MRI showed comparable results in the detection of pancreatic carcinomas as well as in the determination of resectability. Chronic pancreatitis as a "tumor-like-lesion" was the major factor of a missed diagnosis. The results of multi-reader analysis for both reading groups were almost identical with a moderate to good kappa correlation. There is no reason to prefer MRI (more expensive) over CT for patients with the presumptive diagnosis of pancreatic cancer.
Early vascular complications after liver transplantation usually occur in the hepatic arteries. With the use of contrast-enhanced colour Doppler sonography, better detection of arterial and peripheral portal signals can be achieved; peripheral portal vein branches can be helpful in finding small arteries.
The aim of imaging of gastric carcinoma has to be to diagnose the carcinoma as early as possible and to sort out the tumors that are resectable. At the same time imaging of gastric carcinoma should reduce the number of futile laparotomies in patients with advanced, non-resectable tumors to a minimum. Today, endoscopy is the method of choice to diagnose gastric carcinoma. Endosonography is advantageous if small carcinomas have to be judged for depth of tumor infiltration (early gastric carcinoma vs. advanced gastric carcinoma) because high resolution images of the gastric wall are obtained. Staging of large carcinomas that have grown beyond the gastric wall is best performed by hydro-CT because CT scans most accurately delineate infiltrations of surrounding organs/structures and help to plan surgery. Nowadays MRI is not suited for gastric imaging. MRI, however, has the highest potential to fundamentally improve staging of gastric carcinoma if high resolution imaging of the gastric wall is combined with screening for metastases in one examination.
Therapeutic interventions in the skeletal system are an essential part of interventional radiology. Although in terms of figures these procedures are applied less frequently, they are very effective. Percutaneous transarterial embolization of a spinal tumor is well-established interventional treatment. It is primary treatment for preoperative devascularization, but also for palliation of pain and for reduction of tumor volume. As an alternative access for embolization, direct percutaneous puncture of a vertebra is used. A new and promising technique is vertebroplasty, the percutaneous injection of acrylic surgical cement in destroyed vertebrae. The present paper discusses indications, technique, results and complications of these interventional therapeutic modalities in the treatment of primary and secondary spinal tumors.
In selected patients, colorectal HUS is suited for diagnosis and staging of colonic tumours. It also helps to evaluate inflammatory bowel disease, because small and large bowel can be reliably distinguished from each other and the degree of stenosis of inflamed colonic segments becomes visible. Furthermore, HUS increases the visibility of fistulas.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.