R Lencioni

Università di Pisa, Pisa, Tuscany, Italy

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Publications (93)223.92 Total impact

  • Article: Small hepatocellular carcinoma. Detection with US, CT, MR imaging, DSA, and Lipiodol-CT.
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    ABSTRACT: Twenty-two patients with 37 small (3 cm or less) nodular lesions of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) were examined with ultrasonography (US), CT, MR imaging, digital subtraction angiography (DSA), and CT following intraarterial injection of Lipiodol (Lipiodol-CT). All patients subsequently underwent surgery, and the gold standard was provided by intraoperative US. The detection rate was 70% for US, 65% for CT, 62% for MR imaging, 73% for DSA, and 86% for Lipiodol-CT. A significant difference (p < 0.05) was observed between the detection rate of Lipiodol-CT and the detection rates of all the other imaging modalities. The difference was even more manifest (p < 0.02) when only lesions smaller than or equal to 1 cm were considered. It is concluded that Lipiodol-CT is the single most sensitive examination to detect small nodules of HCC. It should therefore be considered a mandatory step in the preoperative evaluation of patients with HCC considered to be surgical candidates after noninvasive imaging studies.
    Acta Radiologica 01/1996; 37(1):69-74. · 1.37 Impact Factor
  • Article: Treatment of large HCC: transcatheter arterial chemoembolization combined with percutaneous ethanol injection versus repeated transcatheter arterial chemoembolization.
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    ABSTRACT: To compare the efficacy of transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE) combined with percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI) versus repeated TACE in the treatment of large hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Fifty-three patients with cirrhosis and a large HCC (main tumor, 3.1-8.0 cm in diameter with no more than two daughter nodules) were enrolled in a prospective, randomized study. Twenty-six patients underwent a single TACE session followed by PEI (TACE-PEI group), whereas 27 patients underwent two to five TACE sessions (TACE group). Both groups of patients were similar with regard to liver function. Follow-up ranged from 8 to 39 months. Complete therapeutic responses were higher (P < .05) and tumor recurrences during follow-up were lower (P < .05) in the TACE-PEI group than in the TACE group. Patients in the TACE-PEI group survived longer than those in the TACE group, although the difference was not significant (P > .1). The rates of survival without recurrence were better in the TACE-PEI group than in the TACE group (P < .05). Use of a single TACE session combined with PEI is more effective than repeated TACE in the treatment of large HCC.
    Radiology 12/1995; 197(3):812-8. · 5.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: Treatment of small hepatocellular carcinoma with percutaneous ethanol injection. Analysis of prognostic factors in 105 Western patients.
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    ABSTRACT: Percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI) has been used in the Far East for treating small, unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). To clarify when treatment with PEI may be best indicated for Western patients with HCC, the authors performed a retrospective analysis of the clinicopathologic factors influencing prognosis. From December 1987 to August 1994, 105 patients with cirrhosis with HCC received PEI as the sole anticancer treatment. Eighty-two patients had uninodular tumors smaller than 5 cm, and 23 patients had multiple lesions (2-4) smaller than or equal to 3 cm each. All patients were in Child-Pugh class A (n = 64) or B (n = 41). Survival was analyzed according to patient- and tumor-related factors by means of the Kaplan-Meier method. The estimated survival rates of all 105 patients were 96% at 1 year, 86% at 2 years, 68% at 3 years, 51% at 4 years, 32% at 5 years, and 24% at 6 years. Survival was not affected by sex, age, etiology of cirrhosis, or hepatitis B surface antigen or anti-hepatitis C virus positivity, but depended on Child-Pugh class (P = 0.006) and presence of ascites (P = 0.009). Patients with a pretreatment alpha-fetoprotein level of 200 ng/ml or less had a better prognosis than patients with an alpha-fetoprotein level higher than 200 ng/ml (P = 0.007). Patients with unmodular HCC of 3 cm or less had significantly better long term survival (P = 0.04) than patients with uninodular HCC of 3.1-5 cm or with multinodular tumors. Tumor grade according to Edmondson and Steiner and tumor volume, in contrast, did not significantly influence prognosis (P > 0.1). For Western patients with HCC treated with PEI, the prognosis was highly dependent on the severity of the underlying cirrhosis. Treatment with PEI is best indicated for patients with uninodular tumors of 3 cm or less in greatest dimension and an alpha-fetoprotein level lower than 200 ng/ml.
    Cancer 11/1995; 76(10):1737-46. · 4.77 Impact Factor
  • Article: Ultrasonography of gastrointestinal tract disorders: retrospective and prospective evaluation
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    ABSTRACT: In a retrospective analysis performed on 4167 routine abdominal sonographic (US) examinations (September 1989 to December 1991), 93 US reports strongly suggesting the presence of gastrointestinal (GI) tract disorders were found. Neoplastic GI tract diseases were indicated in 65.6 % of cases and non-neoplastic conditions in 34.4 %. The final diagnoses confirmed all the cases of non-neoplastic disease, while 3 patients sonographically suspected as having a neoplasm proved not to have any GI tract abnormality. In the period January 1992 to December 1992, 62 patients with a suspected GI tract abnormality were enrolled in a prospective double-masked US study after being submitted to conventional radiological studies only in 28 of 62 cases, after conventional studies and CT in 24 of 62 cases, and after CT only in 10 of 62 cases. Sonography furnished additional diagnostic information in 28 of 62 cases when the previous radiological examination did not include CT, but sonography misinterpreted 4 inflammatory disorders as tumours. Our study confirmed the important role of US alone or in association with other imaging modalities in the study of GI tract diseases.
    European Radiology 07/1995; 5(4):347-353. · 3.22 Impact Factor
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    Article: Portal vein thrombosis after percutaneous ethanol injection for hepatocellular carcinoma: value of color Doppler sonography in distinguishing chemical and tumor thrombi.
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    ABSTRACT: The distinction between benign (chemical) and tumor thromboses of the portal vein after treat,ent with percutaneous injection of ethanol for hepatocellular carcinoma is crucial for the proper management of the patient. The purpose of this study was to determine whether color Doppler sonography can be used to differentiate between the two types of thrombi. Between October 1991 and April 1994, portal vein thrombosis was detected by color Doppler sonography in 19 patients (13 men and six women 59-77 years old; mean age, 67 years) who had hepatocellular carcinomas and who had received percutaneous ethanol injection (n = 11) or percutaneous ethanol injection after transcatheter arterial embolization (n = 8). The criterion for diagnosing tumor thrombosis by color Doppler sonography was the detection of pulsatile arterial flow in the thrombus. The benign or malignant nature of the thrombosis was subsequently established by percutaneous fine-needle biopsy of the thrombus; malignant thrombosis was seen in 13 patients, and chemical thrombosis was seen in six patients. Pulsatile arterial flow in the thrombus was observed by color Doppler sonography in 12 of the 13 malignant thrombi and in none of the bland thrombi. The flow was hepatopetal in seven cases and hepatofugal in five cases. The peak systolic frequency shift ranged from 0.59 to 2.65 kHz (mean, 1.35 kHz), and the resistive index ranged from 0.37 to 0.69 (mean, 0.55). The sensitivity and the specificity of color Doppler sonography for the detection of tumor thrombosis were 92% and 100%, respectively. Our study shows that color Doppler sonography is a reliable way to differentiate between chemical and tumor thromboses of the portal vein in patients with hepatocellular carcinomas treated by ethanol injection. When the sonogram shows pulsatile arterial flow within the thrombus, percutaneous biopsy of the thrombus is unnecessary. The finding is always indicative of malignant thrombosis.
    American Journal of Roentgenology 06/1995; 164(5):1125-30. · 2.78 Impact Factor
  • Article: Hepatocellular carcinoma: use of color Doppler US to evaluate response to treatment with percutaneous ethanol injection.
    R Lencioni, D Caramella, C Bartolozzi
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    ABSTRACT: To determine the usefulness of color Doppler ultrasound (US) in the evaluation of the response of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) to percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI). Forty-one patients with 48 lesions 2-5 cm in diameter underwent color Doppler US before and after PEI. Computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, and percutaneous biopsy were also performed to help establish the outcome of therapy. Before treatment, color signals with an arterial Doppler spectrum were seen in 44 of 48 lesions with a frequency shift of 0.51-4.11 kHz (mean, 1.65 kHz). After PEI, 37 of these lesions showed no color signal and were found to be necrotic at CT, MR imaging, and biopsy. In six of seven lesions containing residual tumor, pulsatile flow was still identified, although the frequency shift was significantly decreased (P = .01). Color Doppler US proved useful in the assessment of the therapeutic effect of PEI on HCC.
    Radiology 02/1995; 194(1):113-8. · 5.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament with patellar tendon. Comparison between magnetic resonance and computerized tomography].
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    ABSTRACT: CT and MR potentials were compared in 30 patients submitted to anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction using the patellar tendon. In each patient the clinical data were correlated with the following radiologic parameters: the course of the tibial and femoral tunnels, their intraarticular outlet sites and their shape, the shape of the intercondylar notch and of the medial wall of the lateral femoral condyle and, finally, the shape of the graft and of the synovia. The intraarticular outlet site of the tibial tunnel was studied on the sagittal or transverse planes. In the former case the distance from the anterior tibial edge was considered, together with its relationship to sagittal tibial depth. The intraarticular outlet site of the femoral tunnel which was studied on sagittal and coronal MR planes was determined at CT by calculating its distance, i.e., the number of scans, from the intercondylar notch and from the posterior edge of the femoral condyle. MRI yielded better results thanks to its multiplanarity, but CT proved superior in defining size and shape of the bone outlets, the presence of bone chips (sometimes responsible for synovial reaction), the shape of the intercondylar notch and of the medial wall of the lateral condyle. As regards graft visualization, both CT and MRI yielded satisfying results in most cases. Nevertheless, MR potentials appeared superior thanks to its capabilities in demonstrating the graft in its full length and in differentiating it from surrounding synovial reaction.
    La radiologia medica 11/1994; 88(4):378-87. · 1.44 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Staging of hepatocellular carcinoma. Comparison of ultrasonography, computerized tomography, magnetic resonance, digital angiography, and computerized tomography with lipiodol].
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    ABSTRACT: Accurate staging is necessary in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients to choose the most appropriate therapeutic approach. In the present study, 50 patients with one or more HCC lesions were prospectively examined with ultrasonography (US), Computed Tomography (CT), Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), digital subtraction angiography (DSA) and CT after intraarterial injection of Lipiodol (Lipiodol CT). The study was aimed at suggesting the most appropriate diagnostic work-up for HCC staging. A hundred and twenty-one HCC lesions were detected in the 50 examined patients by means of the above imaging techniques: namely, 21 patients had single lesions, 15 had two lesions, 4 had three lesions and 10 patients had more than three lesions (range: 4-12). US detected 98/121 lesions (81%), CT 92/121 (76%), MRI 90/121 (74%), DSA 102/121 (84%) and Lipiodol CT 115/121 lesions (95%). The sensitivity of Lipiodol CT was significantly higher than that of all the other imaging techniques (p < 0.05). The detection rate of each technique was correlated with the size of the tumors, which were divided into three groups: lesions < or = 1 cm (no. 28), lesions ranging 1.1 to 3 cm (no. 43) and lesions > 3 cm (no. 50). In the lesions < or = 1 cm, detection rates ranged 29-93%; in this group a statistically significant difference (p < 0.01) was observed between Lipiodol CT and all the other imaging modalities. In the lesions 1.1-3 cm, detection rates ranged 77-93%; in this group a statistically significant difference (p < 0.05) was observed between Lipiodol CT and MRI. In the lesions > 3 cm, sensitivity was very high for all imaging modalities--i.e., 94% or higher; in this group no statistically significant difference was observed among the various imaging modalities. Combined US and CT detected 104/121 lesions (86%), US and MRI 101/121 (83%) and CT and MRI 98/121 (81%). The combination of US, CT and MRI allowed the detection of 107/121 lesions (88%), which markedly improved the results of US alone (the statistical index was just above the one usually considered to be significant). In conclusion, our data suggest the following staging work-up for HCC: (a) US as the first step diagnostic tool; (b) CT and possibly MRI, in the cases with a single lesion at US and in the patients eligible for surgery; (c) Lipiodol CT in the cases which CT and MRI confirmed to be single lesions.
    La radiologia medica 11/1994; 88(4):429-36. · 1.44 Impact Factor
  • Article: Lipiodol-CT in the detection of tumor persistence in hepatocellular carcinoma treated with percutaneous ethanol injection.
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    ABSTRACT: Our purpose was to investigate the usefulness of Lipiodol-CT for detection of residual viable neoplastic tissue in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) lesions treated by means of percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI). An emulsion of 5 to 20 ml iodized oil and 50 to 70 mg doxorubicin hydrochloride was intraarterially injected in 18 patients with 25 HCC lesions treated by means of PEI one to 24 months before. At CT performed 3 to 5 weeks after injection, retention of Lipiodol was observed in 9 of 13 tumors that still contained viable neoplastic tissue and in 2 of 12 tumors proven to have undergone complete necrosis after PEI. The sensitivity and specificity of Lipiodol-CT were 69.2% and 83.3%, respectively. Thus, Lipiodol-CT seems to have limited diagnostic value after PEI, probably as a consequence of the alcohol-induced vascular damage, accounting for both false-negative and false-positive results.
    Acta Radiologica 08/1994; 35(4):323-8. · 1.37 Impact Factor
  • Article: Transmission of radiological images using broadband communications
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    ABSTRACT: The aim of our work was to implement and validate a system for the acquisition, local management and remote transmission of diagnostic images using two interconnected brrnldbarud Metropolitan Area Networks (MANs). The MAN technoloy is compliant with the IEEE 8()2.6 standard, also known as DiStribrutell Queue Dual Bus (D()1)B). Application domains included tcleradiblogy and teleprocessing of diagnostic incages. Teleradiology was focused on the enhancement of the radiologist to clinician information flow witlcirc the framework of the European Project EurIPACS. An intrainstitutional scenario was taken as a paradigm in the field of staging, nonstrrgical treatment, and follow-up of hepatocellular carcinoma. Remote processing of diagnostic images using the broadband MAN allowed a cooperative work with scientific institutions in an area often limited by the complexity of image transfer acrd the lack of timely feedback concerning tlce. clinical usefulness of processed images. ()ur preliminary experience demonstrated that the DQDB MAN provided a fast and reliable means for transmitting diagnostic images.
    European Radiology 06/1994; 4(4):377-381. · 3.22 Impact Factor
  • Article: Long-term follow-up study of adenomatous hyperplasia in liver cirrhosis.
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    ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study was to investigate the natural history of adenomatous hyperplasia (AH) in liver cirrhosis, which is suspected of being a precancerous condition of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Sixteen patients with 19 histologically proven AH nodules were followed-up over time with ultrasonographic (US) examinations performed every 3-4 months. The biopsy was repeated whenever the volume of the lesion increased, its US pattern changed, or there was a change in the alpha-fetoprotein values. Thirteen out of 19 AH (68.4%) evolved toward HCC after 8-31 months (mean 14.2 months). Malignant transformation was proved in 7/18 AH within 1 year of its initial detection, in 12/15 AH within 2 years, and in 13/14 AH within 4 years. Six AH remained unchanged in size and US pattern for 9-70 months (mean 29.5 months). Long term follow-up of AH confirms that this lesion is a precursor of HCC.
    The Italian journal of gastroenterology 06/1994; 26(4):163-8.
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    Article: Treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma with percutaneous ethanol injection: evaluation with contrast-enhanced MR imaging.
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    ABSTRACT: The aim of this study was to investigate the usefulness of unenhanced and enhanced MR imaging in evaluating the response of hepatocellular carcinoma to percutaneous injection of ethanol. Thirty-one patients with 40 hepatocellular carcinomas less than 5 cm in diameter were examined with MR imaging before and after percutaneous injection of ethanol. Unenhanced T1- and T2-weighted and contrast-enhanced T1-weighted spin-echo images were obtained. CT and percutaneous biopsy were performed 1 month after the final injection of ethanol and repeated at 6-month intervals to establish the outcome of treatment: complete tumor necrosis was shown in 36 lesions and incomplete tumor necrosis was seen in four lesions. Of the 36 proved necrotic lesions, 31 showed homogeneously low signal intensity on T2-weighted MR images obtained after treatment, owing to coagulative necrosis of the tumor. In the remaining five necrotic lesions, hypointense and hyperintense areas coexisted; the hyperintense areas were caused by liquefactive necrotic material in two cases and by chronic inflammatory tissue along the boundary of the necrotic area in three cases. None of the 36 necrotic lesions showed contrast enhancement on T1-weighted images obtained after IV injection of gadopentetate dimeglumine. In the four lesions with incomplete necrosis, the viable portion of the tumor was identified as a hyperintense area on T2-weighted images and as an enhancing area on contrast-enhanced T1-weighted images. No correlation was found between lesion features on unenhanced T1-weighted images and outcome of therapy. Contrast-enhanced T1-weighted MR images allow a reliable evaluation of the effectiveness of treatment and are more accurate than unenhanced MR studies. Contrast-enhanced MR imaging may be considered a valuable alternative to contrast-enhanced CT in the follow-up of hepatocellular carcinomas treated with percutaneous injection of ethanol.
    American Journal of Roentgenology 05/1994; 162(4):827-31. · 2.78 Impact Factor
  • Article: Hepatocellular carcinoma: CT and MR features after transcatheter arterial embolization and percutaneous ethanol injection.
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    ABSTRACT: To investigate the reliability of computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in the evaluation of the response of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) to transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) followed by percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI). Between January 1991 and November 1992, 20 patients (15 men and five women, aged 53-73 years [mean, 64.6 years]) with 31 HCC lesions underwent CT and MR imaging before and after treatment with combined TAE and PEI. Twenty-seven tumors, which were hypointense on post-treatment T2-weighted images and on gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted images, were seen to be necrotic at biopsy. In four cases of incomplete necrosis, viable tumor was hyperintense on T2-weighted images and was enhanced after administration of contrast material. CT provided a larger spectrum of imaging features as a result of the presence of both hyperattenuating areas (caused by retention of iodized oil) and hypoattenuating areas (due to ethanol-induced necrosis). CT and MR imaging findings proved useful in the evaluation of the response of HCC to combined TAE and PEI.
    Radiology 05/1994; 191(1):123-8. · 5.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: Percutaneous ethanol injection therapy of adenomatous hyperplastic nodules in cirrhotic liver disease.
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    ABSTRACT: Adenomatous hyperplastic nodules (AHNs) in cirrhotic liver are considered a precancerous condition which may lead to hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In this study, we treated a total of 23 AHNs in 15 patients with percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI). The treatment included 6 to 8 PEIs, performed on an out-patient basis under sonographic guidance. A 22 G (0.7 mm) spinal needle was used. The total amount of alcohol delivered into each lesion was 8 to 25 ml (mean 14.9 ml). At the end of treatment, complete necrosis of the nodule was proved in all cases by multiple fine-needle biopsies and confirmed by CT and MR findings. During follow-up (9-41 months, mean 24 months) no recurrences were demonstrated. However, HCC occurred elsewhere in the liver of 4 patients and additional AHNs were detected in 2 patients. Thus, PEI proved able to cause complete ablation of AHNs, presumably preventing their malignant transformation. However, patients with AHN remain at high risk for developing HCC.
    Acta Radiologica 04/1994; 35(2):138-42. · 1.37 Impact Factor
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    Article: Percutaneous injection of ethanol to treat autonomous thyroid nodules.
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    ABSTRACT: The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of sonographically guided percutaneous injection of ethanol for treating autonomous thyroid nodules in order to assess that technique's feasibility as an alternative to traditional ablative (radionuclide and surgical) therapies. Thirty-two patients with autonomous thyroid nodules were included in the study: seven had thyrotoxicosis, and 25 were in the pretoxic clinical phase. Ethanol was injected percutaneously on an outpatient basis once or twice a week for a total of three to 10 injections per nodule, mainly depending on the nodule's size. Scintigrams obtained 3 months after the end of treatment were used to assess response to this therapy. The follow-up period was from 3 to 30 months. Thyroid scintigraphy 3 months after percutaneous injection of ethanol showed complete recovery of function in extranodular tissue in 26 patients (81%), partial recovery in five patients (16%), and no recovery in one patient (3%). In all patients, the volume of the nodules decreased by more than 50% after treatment. In three of five patients in whom scintigraphy showed only partial recovery of function in extranodular tissue, a second percutaneous injection of ethanol was given after 15 months. The therapy was well tolerated, and after a total of 216 injections, no patient had permanent side effects. Our experience shows that percutaneous injection of ethanol is a practical alternative to traditional treatments for autonomous thyroid nodules and that it is an option for treating pretoxic adenoma.
    American Journal of Roentgenology 11/1993; 161(4):871-6. · 2.78 Impact Factor
  • Article: Inflammatory aneurysm of the abdominal aorta: role of ultrasonography
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    ABSTRACT: During a 5-year period 229 aneurysms of the abdominal aorta were identified by ultrasonography (US) and subsequently submitted to CT. Of these, 41 were seen to be of the inflammatory type on the grounds of the CT scans, confirmed in 29 cases by surgical findings. The patients were 38 men and 3 women, mean age 64.9 years. US, performed using both 3.5 and 5 MHz probes, revealed the inflammatory nature of the aneurysm in 33 of 41 cases (80.5%). In the remaining cases a correct diagnosis could not be determined because of obesity and/or the distal location of the lesion. Regarding the complications associated with the inflammatory nature of the aneurysm (considered only in those cases submitted to surgery) US revealed a good diagnostic accuracy for ureteral involvement (7/7 cases detected, no false positives). Caval involvement was also correctly identified in 6 of 8 cases, although overestimated in 3 of 21. Both of these complications were correctly detected by CT in all cases. Neither US nor CT furnished reliable signs regarding duodenal and colonic involvement (surgically proven in 4 of 29 cases). US proved effective in detecting the inflammatory nature of the aneurysm. If surgery is considered, CT seems mandatory for a correct assessment of the complications.
    European Radiology 07/1993; 3(4):333-336. · 3.22 Impact Factor
  • Article: [The Achilles tendon: echography at different frequencies. Comparative study].
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    ABSTRACT: The authors report their experience with a comparative US study employing different-frequency probes (7.5, 10, 13 and 15 MHz) in Achilles tendon conditions. The study population included 49 patients, 37 of them athletes. All patients complained of the same symptoms: achillodynia in the middle third (group A, 29/49 cases), achillodynia in the lower end (group B, 16/49 cases), suspected partial rupture in the middle third (group C, 2/49 cases) and suspected distal rupture in the upper third (group D, 2/49 cases). In group A, the different frequencies yielded different results. 7.5 MHz frequencies yielded negative results in 13/29 patients, versus 3/29 with higher frequencies, which demonstrated peritenon inflammation in 10/29 cases. In the remaining 16 cases, where 7.5 MHz frequencies had shown tendon inflammation and degeneration, the higher frequencies confirmed the findings, even though their accuracy was greater. On the contrary, in the cases of distal achillodynia where pain was mainly due to inflammation of the retrocalcaneal bursa, the different frequencies yielded similar results, even though the higher ones proved more accurate in revealing tendon abnormalities--i.e., thickening, focal hypolucencies, spotty microcalcifications, irregularity of the bone lining. In group B, the different frequencies once again exhibited similar results showing a focal hypoechoic discontinuity which was correctly diagnosed on the basis of clinical history. Finally, as for group C, the lower frequencies gave better results because of the deeper location of the region of interest. In both cases a small blood collection was visible, between gastrocnemius and soleus, in the absence of clear-cut tendon lesions. No matter what the condition, the higher frequencies were extremely valuable since they allowed excellent demonstration of tendon anatomy. The tendon is enveloped by the peritenon, made of two macroscopically distinct sheaths the distinction of which is allowed by higher frequencies when a minimal amount of fluid is present. From the peritenon, the intratendon septa originate circumscribing spaces containing tendon fiber bundles. The vessels, which run longitudinally, are located within the confluence of the septa. On US images, the septa appear as thin hypoechoic stripes or small hyperechoic spots depending on the type of scan (longitudinal/axial). As to tendon fibers--i.e., tenocytes, collagen and elastic fibers--their pattern is homogeneous and hypoechoic since devoid of interfaces.
    La radiologia medica 07/1993; 85(6):741-7. · 1.44 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Echography in neoplasms of the mesopharynx and the larynx].
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    ABSTRACT: Laryngeal and mesopharyngeal cancers are usually diagnosed by means of endoscopy which, however, fails to demonstrate tumor spread to adjacent structures. Aim of the present work is to assess the role of US in the evaluation of these lesions, relative to the demonstration of both the primary tumor with its local spread and metastases. This could help choose the correct therapeutic approach and select the patients ineligible for surgery to treat with chemo-/radiotherapy. Twenty-seven patients underwent US: 9 had mesopharyngeal and 5 supraglottic cancers, 11 had glottic and 2 subglottic lesions. With the only exception of subglottic cancers, US always demonstrated the primary tumor and its spread to anterior and posterior perilaryngeal structures. Moreover, node involvement could be studied. US proved uninformative in demonstrating the posterolateral laryngeal walls, the subglottic area, the presence of deep lymph nodes and the retrocartilaginous structures when associated with calcifications of the thyroid cartilage. In summary, we believe that US can be useful as the first-step imaging modality to stage laryngeal and mesopharyngeal cancers and to follow the patients submitted to chemo-/radiotherapy.
    La radiologia medica 06/1993; 85(5):625-31. · 1.44 Impact Factor
  • Article: Management of adenomatous hyperplastic nodules in the cirrhotic liver: US follow-up or percutaneous alcohol ablation?
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    ABSTRACT: In order to investigate the most appropriate management of adenomatous hyperplastic nodules in cirrhosis (AHNs), retrospective and prospective studies were undertaken. The retrospective study included 11 AHNs detected in nine patients, who were followed with ultrasonography (US) and fine-needle biopsy (FNB); seven of these lesions evolved into hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) after a mean follow-up period of 11.4 months. The prospective study involved 19 AHNs (in 12 patients) that were submitted to percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI); all lesions underwent necrosis at the dynamic computed tomographic (CT) examination and at multiple FNBs performed 1 month after the end of treatment. In four patients studied with magnetic resonance (MR), all treated lesions were markedly hypointense in the T2-weighted images. No complications occurred after a total number of 114 alcohol injections. No local recurrences were observed after a mean follow-up period of 16.9 months. PEI should therefore be considered mandatory in the management of AHNs.
    Abdominal Imaging 02/1993; 18(1):50-5. · 1.73 Impact Factor
  • Article: Intraductal solitary papilloma: sonographic findings
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    ABSTRACT: The aim of the study was to define the ultrasonographic characteristics of intraductal solitary papilloma (ISP) and to discuss the differential diagnoses from other focal lesions of the breast. Sixteen ISP were found among 35 patients with haematic discharging breasts all of whom were submitted to sonography and cytology. The mean age of the patients was 28 years. Three types of lesions were observed: (1) a solid nodule with peripheral hypoechoic areas (56.2%); (2) papillary vegetation within a cystic cavity (25%); (3) periareolar dilated duct, filled with dense material (18.8%). The observed cases demonstrate that sonography was always reliable in detecting the lesion. This result is better than those reported in literature and may be correlated with the low mean age of the patients in our series, which allowed an optimal study with sonography. The three sonographic patterns observed seem to circumscribe the differential diagnoses, thus simplifying the diagnostic process.
    European Radiology 12/1992; 3(1):38-40. · 3.22 Impact Factor