Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

52 patients with normal pancreas, pancreatitis and pancreatic tumors were examined by magnetic resonance imaging (Magnetom 0.5 T). Using T1-, proton density- and T2-weighted spin-echo sequences images were obtained before and after oral administration of Gadolinium-DTPA (Gd-DTPA, 1 mM, 15 g/l Mannit, 5-13 ml/kg). Gd-DTPA resulted in hyperintense labeling of small bowel in all sequences and improved visualization of pancreatic head, body and tail in 15, 14 and 7 of 27 patients with normal pancreas and in 17, 8 and 6 of 25 patients with diseased pancreas. Better delineation of pseudocysts and tumorous gut wall invasion were diagnostically profitable. With regard to motion artifact reduced MRI of the intestine using fast sequences Gd-DTPA may be a suitable oral contrast agent to improve the imaging of the pancreas.
...
PMID:[Gadolinium-DTPA as an oral contrast medium for magnetic resonance tomography of the pancreas]. 184 93

Twenty-five MRI scans were performed on 14 patients with cadaveric pancreatic transplants to determine the role of this modality in the evaluation of transplant dysfunction. Our population included 12 normal transplants and 13 recipients with pancreatic graft dysfunction (either rejection or pancreatitis). Six of the latter patients had two or more scans permitting reassessment of the same transplant in various states of health. T1-and T2-weighted MR images were evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively to see if certain patterns were associated with clinical status. We found that although MRI was capable of producing excellent images of the in situ pancreatic transplant, this modality was unable to reliably distinguish the normal from the abnormal transplant. This conclusion differs from prior assessments; possible reasons for this are discussed.
...
PMID:MRI of the pancreas transplant: lack of correlation between imaging and clinical status. 194 77

The importance of ultrasound in the diagnosis of primary pancreatic adenocarcinoma is due to the wide use of ultrasound as a first diagnostic modality in the case of abdominal problems, immediately after the physical examination. The results of the ultrasound examination allow the physician to choose the best way to explore the pancreas further (CT, pancreatography, angiography, MRI). The technical quality of the ultrasound examination is mandatory and the radiologist must be able to recognize its insufficiencies. The pancreatic adenocarcinoma is difficult to see with ultrasound: infiltration, ill-defined borders and echopattern; the lymph node or metastatic involvement is frequent and remains a good diagnostic sign. Many pitfalls can be attributed to this technique; the variations of the normal anatomy, the diversity and variable appearance of pancreatic lesions and the association with pancreatitis. The US-guided puncture represents a way to limit the use of diagnostic exploratory laparotomy.
...
PMID:[Contribution of echography to the diagnosis of cancer of the exocrine pancreas. Pitfalls and limits. Results of guided biopsy]. 218 45

A 47-year-old woman was evaluated for congenital dwarfism, primary amenorrhoea due to hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism, severe hyperlipidaemia with pancreatitis, and overt diabetes mellitus associated with severe insulin resistance requiring 2.5-3 units of insulin per kilogram body weight. Chromosomal analysis with trypsin banding was normal and biochemical evaluation revealed low oestrogen levels, inappropriately low gonadotrophins, very low IGF-I concentrations and GH concentrations unresponsive to insulin or L-dopa administration. Prolactin, pituitary-adrenal and pituitary-thyroid axes were normal. Dynamic testing with GnRH and GHRH produced increases in FSH, LH and GH concentrations. A MRI of the brain revealed no discernible hypothalamic abnormalities and a small pituitary. The presence of congenital combined growth hormone and gonadotrophin deficiency on the basis of a suprapituitary defect suggests the existence of common or related pathways regulating GnRH and GHRH synthesis or secretion and may have contributed to the ultimate development of insulin resistance and hyperlipidaemia.
...
PMID:Isolated combined growth hormone and gonadotrophin deficiency due to hypothalamic dysfunction, associated with insulin resistance. 755 20

Case report of a cystic dystrophia appearing in an ectopic pancreas. The clinical diagnosis was preoperatively suspected by the findings of CT scan revealing a tumor located in the wall of the duodenum and by the data of MRI indicating its cystic and fibrotic structure. A focus of reacting pancreatitis was found in the vicinity of the cystic dystrophia while the remaining pancreas was normal. The surgical treatment was a duodenopancreatectomy, justified by the potential risks of complications.
...
PMID:[Cystic dystrophy in an aberrant pancreas. Contribution of computerized tomography and MRI]. 790 71

The typical MRI features of the most common pancreatic diseases, such as pancreatitis and adenocarcinoma of the pancreas, have been established. However, even in these common pancreatic disorders, MRI correlation with the underlying pathology is limited for clinical reasons. We emphasize MR-pathological correlation of inflammatory and neoplastic pancreatic changes, including pancreatitis, adenocarcinoma, acinar cell carcinoma, rare cystic and solid pancreatic neoplasms, and islet cell tumors. By highlighting the correlation of key pathological features with MR findings, a better understanding of the MR appearance of pancreatic pathology can be provided. In addition, MRI may prove a powerful tool in detection and characterization of pancreatic tumors.
...
PMID:[MRI of the pancreas: radiologic-pathologic correlation]. 877 27

Eleven piglets with haemorrhagic necrotizing pancreatitis and nine piglets with oedematous pancreatitis were imaged using a multi-breath-hold TurboFLASH (TR 6.5 ms, TE 3 ms, TI 300 ms, flip angle 8 degrees , three slices) pre-excited T1-weighted sequence with an IV bolus injection of gadopentetate dimeglumine (Gd-DTPA, 0. 3 mmol/kg) as a contrast agent to show dynamic contrast enhancement of the pancreas by MRI. All piglets were imaged according to the same protocol before inducing the disease. Following the IV Gd-DTPA bolus, time-enhancement curve of the pancreas during haemorrhagic necrotizing pancreatitis was significantly lower than during oedematous pancreatitis. The enhancement curves for the healthy piglets and piglets with oedematous pancreatitis did not differ significantly. Each piglet served as its own control. Because the results of this initial study are similar to those obtained with contrast-enhanced CT, we conclude that our results may encourage further clinical trials, and contrast-enhanced dynamic MRI may be an alternative to the established method of CT for diagnosing acute haemorrhagic necrotizing pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging for the detection of acute haemorrhagic necrotizing pancreatitis. 900 Mar 88

The purpose of this study was to compare T2-weighted and dynamic contrast enhanced MRI with contrast enhanced CT in patients with severe acute pancreatitis. Thirty-two patients were examined using axial T2-weighted spin-echo imaging (TR 1801, TE 15/90) and a multi-slice rapid gradient-echo sequence (TR 135, TE 4, FA 80 degrees) (FLASH) in axial and coronal planes. Fifteen 5 mm axial slices at 10 mm intervals were acquired during a single breath-hold of 19 s before, and at 10 and 40 s after a bolus injection of Gd-DTPA. Additional FLASH images in the coronal plane were obtained 2 min after injection of contrast medium. MR was compared with contemporary enhanced CT by two blinded observers who scored pancreatic viability and the content of intra and extra-pancreatic fluid collections. The presence of gas, calcification and haemorrhage was noted. Abnormalities in adjacent organs, evidence of vascular occlusion and indicators of aetiology were also recorded. MR and CT were concordant in distinguishing viable pancreatic tissue from areas of necrosis. MR appeared to be more effective than CT in characterizing the content of fluid collections and in demonstrating gall stones, although CT remains superior in detecting flecks of gas and calcification. MR carries some advantages over CT and can be regarded as an alternative primary technique in patients with severe pancreatitis.
...
PMID:T2-weighted and dynamic enhanced MRI in acute pancreatitis: comparison with contrast enhanced CT. 904 43

The role of MR imaging in the assessment of pancreatic adenocarcinoma is in identification, characterization and staging of the neoplastic lesion. Technique optimization is required in order to obtain high qualities images competitive with spiral CT. The choice of imaging protocol is strictly related to the available equipment as well as fast imaging capabilities. Contrast-enhanced study using breath-hold sequences is required if working at high field strength with high gradient performance; on mid-low field strength nonbreath-hold acquisition techniques, using respiratory compensation techniques, can be implemented. The use of fat saturation pulses may increase the sensitivity of MR in detecting pancreatic lesions. Other advantages of MR imaging are represented by the availability of additional noninvasive techniques for the evaluation of the biliary tree (MR-cholangiopancreatography) and splanchnic vessels (MR-angiography). Lesion identification is based on TIw sequences where the lesion appears hypointense compared with the surrounding pancreas; increased lesion-pancreas contrast is obtained when fat suppression is used. On dynamic studies following gadolinium injection, pancreatic tumors are hypovascular compared with surrounding normal pancreatic gland. Problems in correctly defining the size of the lesions may be encountered in patients presenting with inflammatory changes of the pancreatic parenchyma surrounding the carcinoma (epineoplastic pancreatitis). For lesion characterization MRI is not able to characterize focal pancreatic lesions, allowing a differential diagnosis between pancreatic cancer and focal hypertrophic chronic pancreatitis. Even the use of MR-cholangiopancreatography is not helpful for characterizing focal pancreatic masses. MR imaging is accurate in local staging (assessment of peripancreatic fat infiltration) thanks to the higher contrast resolution, but in vascular staging and in the evaluation of lymphnodal involvement it suffers the same limitations as computed tomography. Future perspective are represented by the use of magnetic resonance angiography for the evaluation of vascular encasement and the use of specific contrast agents for lymphadenopathy. Identification of hepatic metastases with MRI has been proven to be high, with sensitivity and specificity comparable to CT. The use of liver-specific contrast agents (either positive or negative) is becoming almost routine and it is proving to further improve the diagnostic value of MRI.
...
PMID:[MR imaging of pancreatic neoplasms]. 1023 72

The aim of the study was to assess the ability of MRI to differentiate between the two forms of severity of acute pancreatitis (AP), which is important for the detection of patients who require intensive monitoring and therapy. The second objective was to evaluate whether the distinction would be possible regardless of the MRI equipment. Magnetic resonance imaging was performed before and after intravenous administration of a gadolinium (Gd) chelate at 1.0 T using the breath-hold multislice rapid gradient-echo turbo fast low-angle shot (FLASH) sequence in 14 patients, and at 1.5 T with the 2D FLASH(50) sequence with fat saturation in 18 patients with acute pancreatitis early in the course of the disease. The patients were classified according to the Atlanta classification system as having the mild (MAP) or severe (SAP) form of the disease. At 1.0 T with use of a body coil, contrast-enhanced MRI failed to distinguish mild from severe pancreatitis. At 1.5 T with a phased-array body coil, the signal intensities of the patients with SAP were statistically significantly lower than those of the MAP group. Our initial clinical experience suggests that MRI with a sufficient magnetic field gradient strength may be useful for separating the two forms of acute pancreatitis in their early phases.
...
PMID:Detection of severe acute pancreatitis by contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging. 1066 68


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>