Adrien M Dupanloup, Craig S Brown, Karen M Vernau, Ehren M McLarty, Peter J Dickinson
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Ring-enhancing magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) lesions result from various diseases, including infection, neoplasia, inflammation, and vascular etiologies. Differentiation based on standard MRI sequences can be challenging. This study aims to compare the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values of intracranial ring-enhancing lesions of infectious etiology with ring-enhancing lesions caused by other etiologies. Records were reviewed for MRI studies with diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and post-gadolinium T1-weighted ring-enhancing lesions with a definitive histopathological diagnosis or a microbiological diagnosis of brain infection. ADC maps were generated, and regions of interest were selected to evaluate ADC values of ring-enhancing lesions. Normalized ADC values (rADC) were calculated using ADC values from lesional and contralateral brain regions of interest (rADC = ADClesion/ADCCB). A total of 69 cases met the inclusion criteria (68 dogs, 1 cat). Median (range) rADC was significantly lower for intraparenchymal bacterial abscesses [0.54 (0.19-0.82)] compared to ring-enhancing gliomas [1.7 (0.80-3.9); p = 0.0003) and non-infectious inflammatory lesions [1.7 (0.74-3.3); p = 0.024], but not significantly different compared to intraparenchymal hemorrhage [0.54 (0.33-0.87); p > 0.99]. Extraparenchymal bacterial empyema and intraparenchymal fungal abscesses did not exhibit apparent restricted diffusion, with median rADC (range) of 2.8 (1.3-3.4) and 1.2 (1.1-1.8), respectively. With exclusion of hemorrhagic lesions, an rADC of 0.65 had a specificity/sensitivity of 98%/78% for intraparenchymal bacterial abscess. Apparent restricted diffusion on DWI and ADC is a useful marker for identifying intraparenchymal bacterial abscesses among ring-enhancing lesions. However, extraparenchymal bacterial empyema and fungal abscesses may not exhibit this feature.
期刊介绍:
Veterinary Radiology & Ultrasound is a bimonthly, international, peer-reviewed, research journal devoted to the fields of veterinary diagnostic imaging and radiation oncology. Established in 1958, it is owned by the American College of Veterinary Radiology and is also the official journal for six affiliate veterinary organizations. Veterinary Radiology & Ultrasound is represented on the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors, World Association of Medical Editors, and Committee on Publication Ethics.
The mission of Veterinary Radiology & Ultrasound is to serve as a leading resource for high quality articles that advance scientific knowledge and standards of clinical practice in the areas of veterinary diagnostic radiology, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasonography, nuclear imaging, radiation oncology, and interventional radiology. Manuscript types include original investigations, imaging diagnosis reports, review articles, editorials and letters to the Editor. Acceptance criteria include originality, significance, quality, reader interest, composition and adherence to author guidelines.