Fractional anisotropy reductions in the splenium and FWM in the acute stage of mild to moderate TBI may be a useful prognostic factor for long-term cognitive dysfunction.
To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of colour Doppler ultrasonography in the differential diagnosis of gall-bladder lesions, we studied colour Doppler flow imaging of gall-bladder masses in 75 patients with gall-bladder masses, including 26 patients with cancer, 18 with benign polyps, 10 with adenomyomatosis and 21 with pseudo-tumorous sludge and 28 healthy subjects as controls. The presence of a colour signal, pattern of the colour signal, blood flow velocity and resistive index (RI) within lesions were assessed using colour Doppler ultrasonography. In cancerous lesions, the colour signal pattern was diffuse or arborizing (sensitivity 90.5% (19/21); specificity 62.5% (10/16)) and the velocity and RI were (mean +/- s.d.) 39.0 +/- 12.4 cm/s and 0.62 +/- 0.12, respectively, which was significantly different (P < 0.01) compared with controls (11.4 +/- 2.5 and 0.75 +/- 0.03, respectively). The colour signal pattern obtained from polyps was linear at their base in 62.5% (10/16) of cases, but the velocity (13.6 +/- 5.5) and RI (0.74 +/- 0.08) did not differ from those of the controls. Lesions other than cancer and polyp had no colour signal. There were overlaps in the values of velocity and RI between malignant and benign lesions. When 20 cm/s for velocity and 0.65 for RI were used as the respective cut-off values, the sensitivity and specificity of this method in the diagnosis of malignant lesions was 95.2% (20/21) and 87.5% (14/16) for velocity and 66.7% (14/21) and 87.5% (14/16) for RI, respectively. In a prospective study consisting of 10 patients with cancer and 21 patients with polyps, the sensitivity and specificity were 90 and 66.7% for the colour signal, 100 and 100% for velocity and 80 and 90.4% for RI, respectively. In conclusion, colour Doppler ultrasonography can be useful in the diagnosis of gall-bladder masses in combination with conventional ultrasonographic findings of gall-bladder masses, especially in the differentiation of cancers from benign lesions.
Intraductal ultrasonography (IDUS) was performed on 22 patients with extrahepatic bile duct cancer, using the percutaneous transhepatic approach. Intraductal ultrasonography images of the proximal invasion of the bile duct cancer were defined. In addition, three patients were examined through the peroral approach, to try to diagnose whether or not the cancer invaded to the bifurcation of the hepatic duct. Intraductal ultrasonography images obtained through the percutaneous approach could be classified into three patterns, types 1, 2 and 3, according to the features of the interior surface of the bile duct and the thickness of the bile duct wall. Type 1 images, which did not show protrusions into the bile duct lumen and had a bile duct wall of even thickness, were not likely to show bile duct cancer. Type 2 images showed protrusions of the tumour into the bile duct lumen and the surfaces of the protrusions were irregular. Type 3 images showed single or multiple low echoic papillary masses in the bile duct. Using the peroral technique, we considered all three cases to be type 1 and could diagnose that cancer had not invaded to the bifurcation of the hepatic ducts. From the results of this study, we suggest that proximal invasion of extrahepatic bile duct cancer can be diagnosed using IDUS.
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