Publications (17)25.98 Total impact
-
Article: Hypoechoic focal liver lesions: characterization with contrast enhanced ultrasonography.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: To evaluate the late sinusoidal phase of contrast enhancement with a 2nd-generation ultrasound contrast enhanced medium in the characterization of hypoechoic focal liver lesions. We studied 88 hypoechoic liver lesions (diameter range, 1-18 cm; with 18 lesions 2 cm or less) found on conventional grayscale sonography (US) with contrast-enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS). Final diagnosis was made using contrast enhanced helical CT, contrast enhanced MR, angiography (DSA), and/or histopathic confirmation or clinical imaging follow-up. There were 37/88 benign lesions demonstrated: 17 cavernous hemangiomas, 3 capillary hemangiomas, 11 focal nodular hyperplasias (FNH), 3 focal areas of sparing in hepatic steatosis, 2 adenomas, and 1 intrahepatic necrotic area. Malignant lesions demonstrated included 51/88: 27 hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC) in cirrhosis, 11 metastatic carcinomas, 10 metastatic endocrine tumors, 2 cholangiocellular carcinomas (CCC) and 1 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). CEUS characterized 30/37 (81%) benign lesions and 45/51 (88%) malignant lesions. On the basis of the results obtained during the sinusoidal contrast enhanced phase of CEUS, diagnosis of benignancy was possible in 35/37 (95%) of benign liver lesions and diagnosis of malignancy in 49/51 (96%) of malignant liver lesions. The enhancement pattern of 13 small (< or = 2 cm in diameter) hypervascular liver lesions (3 capillary hemangiomas, 2 FNHs, 4 HCCs, 4 metastatic endocrine tumors) was better demonstrated on CEUS than on helical CT. In these cases the hyper vascularization of the lesions shown on CEUS was not confirmed on CT. CEUS distinguished malignant from benign hypoechoic liver lesions with an accuracy of 95%.Journal of Clinical Ultrasound 06/2005; 33(4):164-72. · 0.81 Impact Factor -
Chapter: Pancreatic Neoplasms and Tumor-like Conditions
12/2004: pages 409-446; -
Article: Thymic masses of the middle mediastinum: report of 2 cases and review of the literature.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Although thymic lesions are relatively common causes of anterior mediastinal masses, they can rarely arise in other mediastinal compartments, as it is well recognized that thymic tissue can lie in ectopic intrathoracic locations. A thymic mass within the middle mediastinum has rarely been reported, with only a single case of a thymic cyst described and no reports of a middle mediastinal thymoma. We report 2 thymic masses (1 thymoma and 1 thymic cyst) found to arise in the middle mediastinum.Journal of Thoracic Imaging 08/2004; 19(3):192-5. · 0.98 Impact Factor -
Article: Contrast-enhanced US of hepatocellular carcinoma.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: To evaluate the capabilities of contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) in the characterization of hepatocarcinoma (HCC) in terms of accuracy as compared to spiral CT and diagnostic gain as compared to conventional and Doppler US. Forty-three patients with viral hepatopathy or cirrhosis diagnosed with HCC (6 histologically and 37 cytologically proven) were retrospectively studied. Between January 2002 and May 2003, all patients were evaluated with CEUS after detection of at least one suspicious nodule on US. CEUS features of HCCs were retrospectively compared with those on conventional and Doppler US, and spiral CT. HCCs varied between 1.2 cm and 18 cm in diameter; 14/43 were small' (< or = 2 cm). In 18/43 patients, HCC was multifocal. Doppler US revealed 24/43 hypervascular nodules. On CEUS, 37/43 (86%) showed contrast enhancement in the arterial phase, 13/37 (35%) with negative colour and power Doppler US examination; in 6/37 (16%) contrast enhancement in the arterial phase was not visible on spiral CT. On CEUS, 6/43 hypovascular HCCs were characterized as malignant in the sinusoidal phase. On CEUS, the sinusoidal phase revealed additional nodules not visible on baseline US in 3/18 multifocal HCCs. CEUS diagnosis of HCC in cirrhotic liver is possible with a combination of the arterial phase, which shows tumoral hypervascularity in the microcirculation, and the sinusoidal phase, which allows to confirm the malignancy of the nodule.La radiologia medica 05/2004; 107(4):293-303. · 1.44 Impact Factor -
Article: Detection of colorectal liver metastases: a prospective multicenter trial comparing unenhanced MRI, MnDPDP-enhanced MRI, and spiral CT.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The aim of this study was to compare unenhanced MRI, MnDPDP-enhanced MRI, and spiral CT in the detection of hepatic colorectal metastases. Forty-four patients with hepatic colorectal metastases were examined with unenhanced and MnDPDP-enhanced MRI and with unenhanced and contrast-enhanced spiral CT. The MR examination protocol included baseline T1-weighted spin-echo (SE), T1-weighted gradient-recalled-echo (GRE), and T2-weighted fast-SE sequences; and T1-weighted SE and T1-weighted GRE sequences obtained 30-60 min after administration of 0.5 micromol/kg (0.5 ml/kg) mangafodipir trisodium (MnDPDP). Images were interpreted by three blinded readers. Findings at CT and MRI were compared with those at intraoperative US, which were used as term of reference. Intraoperative US detected 128 metastases. In a lesion-by-lesion analysis, the overall detection rate was 71% (91 of 128) for spiral CT, 72% (92 of 128) for unenhanced MRI, and 90% (115 of 128) for MnDPDP-enhanced MRI. MnDPDP-enhanced MRI was more sensitive than either unenhanced MRI ( p<0.0001) or spiral CT ( p=0.0007). In a patient-by-patient analysis, agreement with gold standard was higher for MnDPDP-enhanced MRI (33 of 44 cases) than for spiral CT (22 of 44 cases, p=0.0023) and unenhanced MRI (21 of 44 cases, p=0.0013). MnDPDP-enhanced MRI is superior to unenhanced MRI and spiral CT in the detection of hepatic colorectal metastases.European Radiology 01/2004; 14(1):14-20. · 3.22 Impact Factor -
Article: Kinking of the vertebral artery (2003:3b).
European Radiology 07/2003; 13(6):1469-71. · 3.22 Impact Factor -
Article: MRI of focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH) with gadobenate dimeglumine (Gd-BOPTA) and SPIO (ferumoxides): an intra-individual comparison.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: To compare the efficacy of two different MR contrast agents for the detection and diagnosis of focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH). Fifty patients with 83 FNH lesions detected on spiral CT were studied in two different MRI sessions with Gd-BOPTA (MultiHance) and ferumoxides (Endorem). MRI with Gd-BOPTA was performed precontrast (T1wGRE and T2wTSE sequences) and during the dynamic and late (1-3 hours) phases after injection (T1wGRE sequences only). MRI with ferumoxides (T1wGRE and T2wTSE sequences) was performed before and at least 30 minutes after injection. Hyper- or isointensity of FNH in the late phase was considered typical for Gd-BOPTA, while isointensity or lesion hypointensity was considered typical for ferumoxides. With Gd-BOPTA, 83 FNH lesions (100%) appeared hyperintense during the arterial phase of dynamic MRI. All but one lesion was iso- or slightly hyperintense in the portal-venous and equilibrium phases. In the late phase, 81 FNH lesions were hyper- or isointense to the surrounding parenchyma, with two lesions appearing slightly hypointense. With ferumoxides, a significant (P < 0.001) number (21/83, 25.3%) of FNH lesions (mean diameter = 16.8 +/- 6.6 mm) were not visible. Of the visible FNH lesions, 38/62 were slightly hyperintense, and 24/62 were isointense to the surrounding parenchyma on the T2wTSE images. On the T1wGRE images, 42/62 lesions were isointense, 19/62 were slightly hyperintense, and one lesion was slightly hypointense. Seventeen lesions in 12 patients with previous neoplasia were all detected after Gd-BOPTA administration, whereas only nine of these 17 lesions (52.9%) were detected after ferumoxide administration. Two of these nine lesions showed atypical enhancement features. Gd-BOPTA-enhanced MRI is significantly better than ferumoxide-enhanced MRI for the identification and characterization of FNH.Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging 06/2003; 17(5):593-602. · 2.70 Impact Factor -
Article: Sonography versus helical CT in identification and staging of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The aim of this prospective study was to compare sonography with helical CT in the identification and staging of ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas. Sixty-four patients with histopathologically proven pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma underwent both sonography and helical CT at our hospital between November 1, 2000, and October 31, 2001. These diagnostic imaging examinations were performed by 2 independent radiologists who were unaware of the findings of any other imaging or histopathologic examination and who assessed each case for the presence of tumor, involvement of peripancreatic vessels, the presence of metastases in the liver, and the resectability of the tumor. In the patients who underwent subsequent laparotomy, imaging-based diagnoses of overall resectability and vascular involvement were compared with surgical findings, which were considered the gold standard. Imaging-based diagnoses for the presence of hepatic metastases were compared with the findings of intraoperative sonography in patients who underwent radical resection and with the surgical findings in the patients who underwent palliative surgery; the operative findings were considered the gold standard. In the identification of pancreatic adenocarcinoma, sonography was more accurate (61 of 64 tumors, 95.3%) than helical CT was (57 of 64 tumors, 89.1%). In the overall prediction of resectability among the 43 patients who underwent laparotomy, sonography (81.4%) was less accurate than CT was (86.0%). In diagnosing involvement of the superior mesenteric artery, sonography (95.3%) was more accurate than CT (88.4%). The 2 methods were equally accurate in diagnosing hepatic metastases (86.0%) and involvement of the celiac trunk (100%) and the superior mesenteric vein (88.4%), but sonography was less accurate than CT for diagnosing involvement of the common hepatic artery (90.7% versus 95.3%, respectively) and portal vein (88.4% versus 93.0%, respectively). Sonography is more reliable than CT in identifying pancreatic adenocarcinoma, and its accuracy in staging is similar to that of CT.Journal of Clinical Ultrasound 06/2003; 31(4):175-82. · 0.81 Impact Factor -
Article: Contrast-enhanced ultrasonographic detection of small pancreatic insulinoma.
Journal of ultrasound in medicine: official journal of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine 05/2003; 22(4):413-7. · 1.25 Impact Factor -
Article: Selective venous sampling in diagnosing ACTH-dependent hypercortisolism.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: To evaluate the sensitivity of selective sampling from the inferior petrosal sinuses in the differential diagnosis of ACTH-dependent hypercortisolism with non-diagnostic pituitary imaging. Between 1987 and 2001, 17 patients (14 women and 3 men, aged 18-63 years) with ACTH-dependent hypercortisolism and negative X-ray of the sellar region, underwent simultaneous bilateral sampling from the inferior petrosal sinuses with ACTH measurement, at baseline and after stimulation with CRH (100 micro i.v.). Baseline samplings were also carried out at the level of the infrarenal and suprarenal inferior vena cava, of the adrenal and suprahepatic veins, of the superior vena cava, of the jugular veins, and of a peripheral vein. A central/peripheral gradient >2 at baseline and/or one >3 after stimulation with CRH was considered indicative of the pituitary origin of ACTH. Bilateral femoral venous catheterization was performed in an angiographic room using 5-French introducers after local anaesthesia. Selective catheterization of the inferior petrosal sinuses was achieved with 100 cm-long, steam-bent (45 degrees) 5-French catheters, without lateral holes. Twelve patients exhibited ACTH central/ peripheral gradients indicating the pituitary origin of the hormonal hyperincretion; this was confirmed by surgical exploration of the hypophysis in 10 patients, whereas 2 refused surgery and were therefore "lost". Of the five patients without ACTH central/peripheral gradients, one had an adrenal metastasis from ACTH-secreting lung neoplasia (with ACTH gradient in the blood flowing back from the adrenal gland), one had a hepatic CRHoma (with high levels of CRH in the suprahepatic veins), whereas the origin of the hyperincretion remained indeterminate in three. Bilateral simultaneous selective sampling from the inferior petrosal sinuses for ACTH measurements proved to be highly sensitive and free of complications in the differential diagnosis of ACTH-dependent forms of hypercortisolism.La radiologia medica 04/2003; 105(4):356-61. · 1.44 Impact Factor -
Article: Interventional radiology in the treatment of high-flow renal arteriovenous fistulas. Report of two cases.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: To describe the morphological and haemodynamic characteristics of high-flow idiopathic renal arteriovenous fistulas and the radiological treatment techniques. Two cases of idiopathic renal arteriovenous fistula were treated with transcatheter embolization. In the first case, the anomalous arteriovenous communication was embolized with acrylic glue through the afferent artery while the efferent vein was temporarily occluded with a balloon catheter using the "stop flow" technique. In the second case, the fistula was occluded from the arterial side using Gianturco coils and the "free flow" technique. In both cases post-procedural angiography demonstrated occlusion of the fistula. A color-Doppler US examination 6 months later showed the regularization of flow parameters in the renal artery and vein. Angiographic follow-up showed occlusion of the arteriovenous fistula, regularization of the renal artery calibre and normal renal parenchymal flow. Embolization is the best treatment for rare, high-flow, renal arteriovenous fistulas. The "stop flow" technique with acrylic glue is fast and economical. The "free flow" technique with coils is more expensive and complex, but just as effective.La radiologia medica 04/2003; 105(3):195-204. · 1.44 Impact Factor -
Article: Non-traumatic abdominal emergencies: imaging and intervention in acute pancreatic conditions.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Pancreatic emergency, unrelated to traumatic events, can occur as a consequence of the more significant pancreatic pathologies (acute and chronic pancreatitis, tumors) or of the interventional or surgical treatment carried out as therapy for the above-mentioned lesions. Acute pancreatic conditions are represented by pancreatic infections, the involvement of organs, structures, and adjacent spaces within the pancreatic disease, and, lastly, vascular complications. Acute pancreatic conditions are common in pancreatic diseases and can be catastrophic; even if there is a gamut in the severity of clinical presentation, each can be potentially life threatening. Immediate radiological detection of the lesions together with a correct therapeutic percutaneous radiological approach whenever an interventional procedure is preferable to surgery or, when performed before surgery, whenever it can optimize its results, is of fundamental importance in the management of these patients. This article focuses on the essential role of radiology and the integration of imaging and intervention in acute pancreatic conditions.European Radiology 11/2002; 12(10):2407-34. · 3.22 Impact Factor -
Article: Hypervascular hepatic lesions: dynamic and late enhancement pattern with Gd-BOPTA.
Academic Radiology 09/2002; 9 Suppl 2:S476-9. · 1.69 Impact Factor -
Article: Contrast agents for hepatic magnetic resonance imaging.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The current availability of liver-specific contrast media (LSCM) allows the possibility to obtain an accurate diagnosis when studying focal liver lesions (FLL). It is necessary to have an in-depth knowledge of the biologic and histologic characteristics of FLL and the enhancement mechanism of LSCM to gain significant accuracy in the differential diagnosis of FLL. It is possible to subdivide FLL into three main groups according to the kinetics of contrast enhancement: hypervascular FLL, hypovascular FLL, and FLL with delayed enhancement. Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging is an important tool in the identification and characterization of FLL. LSCM with a first phase of extracellular distribution give both dynamic (morphologic) and late phase (functional) information useful for lesion characterization. With LSCM it is possible to differentiate with high accuracy benign from malignant lesions and hepatocellular from nonhepatocellular lesions. To understand contrast behavior after injection of LSCM, it is necessary to correlate contrast enhancement with the biologic and histologic findings of FLL.Topics in Magnetic Resonance Imaging 07/2002; 13(3):117-50. -
Article: Gastroduodenal artery stump haemorrhage following pylorus-sparing Whipple procedure: treatment with covered stents.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: To report a case of bleeding after pancreatoduodenectomy in a patient with pancreatic leak and portal thrombosis who was successfully treated with an endovascular approach. A 58-year-old male, suffering from neoplasm of the distal bile duct, underwent a pylorus-preserving Whipple procedure. On the 18th day, following a sudden drop in pressure and low haematocrit values, the patient underwent surgery. The source of the bleeding was not found. Six days later, following the appearance of bleeding from the abdominal drainage and haematemesis with shock, the patient had an immediate angiography. Bleeding from the gastroduodenal artery stump was evident, the portography showed no portal flow. With respect to the shortness of the stump, safe embolisation with coils, while preserving the common hepatic artery patency, was difficult to obtain. By transcatheter placement of covered stents into the hepatic artery and thereby occluding the origin of the gastroduodenal artery, the bleeding was stopped. After 2 months, CT angiography showed patency of both the common and proper hepatic arteries. Nine months after the procedure the patient is in good health. Percutaneous placement of covered stents can be the solution in cases where transcatheter embolisation is not recommendable because of portal vein thrombosis.Digestive Surgery 02/2002; 19(3):237-40. · 1.22 Impact Factor -
Article: The contribution of ultrasonography and computed tomography in the diagnosis of nonfunctioning islet cell tumors of the pancreas
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The personal series of 12 nonfunctioning islet cell tumors (NFIT) of the pancreas is reported. The ultrasound and computed tomography features of NFIT are analyzed, and a few signs are identified that may be useful in the differential diagnosis vs ductal carcinoma. The necessity to complete the diagnostic work up by means of fine needle aspiration biopsy and cytologic smears is also emphasized.Abdominal Imaging 11/1990; 15(1):139-144. · 1.73 Impact Factor -
Article: Diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma of the tunica vaginalis testis by ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration.
[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Malignant mesothelioma of the tunica vaginalis testis is a very rare tumor that is not usually diagnosed until surgery is undertaken. In only a few cases has the correct diagnosis been obtained preoperatively by cytologic examination of fluid from the hydrocele. We describe a case of mesothelioma of the tunica vaginalis testis that was suspected on sonography because of the presence of a hydrocele and focal nodularities. The diagnosis was confirmed preoperatively by ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration cytology aimed at 1 of the focal nodularities. Our patient was an 85-year-old man with concomitant cancer of the sigmoid colon; because of his age and the spread of his colon cancer, we did not remove the scrotal lesion. We recommend consideration of ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration cytology of the solid masses instead of the fluid from the hydrocele in cases of suspected malignant mesothelioma of the tunica vaginalis testis.Journal of Clinical Ultrasound 30(3):181-3. · 0.81 Impact Factor
Top Journals
Institutions
-
2002–2005
-
Università degli studi di Verona
- Department of Surgery
Verona, Veneto, Italy
-