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Current and emerging MR imaging techniques for the diagnosis and management of CSF flow disorders: a review of phase-contrast and time-spatial labeling inversion pulse. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 2014; 36:623-30. [PMID: 25012672 DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.a4030] [Citation(s) in RCA: 72] [Impact Index Per Article: 7.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/18/2023]
Abstract
This article provides an overview of phase-contrast and time-spatial labeling inversion pulse MR imaging techniques to assess CSF movement in the CNS under normal and pathophysiologic situations. Phase-contrast can quantitatively measure stroke volume in selected regions, notably the aqueduct of Sylvius, synchronized to the heartbeat. Judicious fine-tuning of the technique is needed to achieve maximal temporal resolution, and it has limited visualization of CSF motion in many CNS regions. Phase-contrast is frequently used to evaluate those patients with suspected normal pressure hydrocephalus and a Chiari I malformation. Correlation with successful treatment outcome has been problematic. Time-spatial labeling inversion pulse, with a high signal-to-noise ratio, assesses linear and turbulent motion of CSF anywhere in the CNS. Time-spatial labeling inversion pulse can qualitatively visualize whether CSF flows between 2 compartments and determine whether there is flow through the aqueduct of Sylvius or a new surgically created stoma. Cine images reveal CSF linear and turbulent flow patterns.
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Traversing K space with fast MR scans. DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING 1994; 16:83, 87-96, 102. [PMID: 10147090] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/11/2023]
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Abstract
Although expression of the enzyme gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) is the most common phenotypic marker of preneoplastic foci in the livers of carcinogen-treated rats, it is not generally expressed in mouse liver tumors or hepatic foci. However, several carcinogens, including safrole and ortho-azoaminotoluene (OAT), have been reported to induce GGT-positive foci in mice. We asked whether safrole and OAT induce GGT expression in preneoplastic foci or if these compounds select for a distinct set of lesions that can be identified by their GGT-positive phenotype. We treated 12-day-old male and female C57BL/6J mice with N,N-diethylnitrosamine (DEN) (0.20 mumol/g body wt) to initiate hepatocarcinogenesis. From 6 to 24 weeks of age, during the promotion phase of hepatocarcinogenesis, groups of mice were treated with 3,4,5,3',4',5'-hexabromobiphenyl (HBB), safrole or OAT. Additional groups of female mice were ovariectomized at 6 weeks of age with or without subsequent chronic treatment with testosterone. All the animals were killed at 24 weeks of age and serial liver sections were stained for glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase) or GGT. Both testosterone and HBB were strong promoters of the development of G6Pase-deficient foci. No GGT-positive foci were observed in animals treated with these agents or with DEN alone. In mice fed safrole or OAT during the promotion period, female mice developed more G6Pase-deficient foci than male mice, and GGT-positive foci were observed. Analysis of serial sections revealed that the G6Pase-deficient foci and the GGT-positive foci were independent populations. The relative number of these two classes of foci varied according to the treatment regimen. In females fed safrole, 7% of the foci in the liver were GGT-positive while in female mice fed OAT, 45% were GGT-positive. In all groups of mice in which we observed GGT-positive foci and in ovariectomized female mice, we noted a third independent population of foci which demonstrated significantly increased expression of G6Pase relative to surrounding normal liver. These data indicate that different treatments during the promotion stage of hepatocarcinogenesis in the mouse may give rise to distinct populations of preneoplastic lesions. Further studies of the molecular events giving rise to these distinct lesions will provide insights into the multiple pathways that result in hepatocarcinogenesis.
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Partial hepatectomy is a promoter of hepatocarcinogenesis in C57BL/6J male mice but not in C3H/HeJ male mice. Carcinogenesis 1990; 11:589-94. [PMID: 2323000 DOI: 10.1093/carcin/11.4.589] [Citation(s) in RCA: 25] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/31/2022] Open
Abstract
We have shown previously that the difference between C57BL/6J and C3H/HeJ male mice in their susceptibilities to chemically-induced liver tumors results predominantly from an allelic difference at the Hepatocarcinogen sensitivity (Hcs) locus. This locus modulates the rate of growth of preneoplastic liver lesions and may also play a role in the turnover of normal hepatocytes in the adult liver. To define further the growth regulatory pathway of which the Hcs gene is a component, we asked whether the expression of the Hcs gene would modulate the response of preneoplastic liver lesions to the physiologic growth stimulus generated by a two-thirds hepatectomy. Twelve-day-old male and female C57BL/6J and C3H/HeJ mice were injected with 0.5 mumols N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea/g body weight. At six weeks of age half the animals received a two-thirds hepatectomy. Groups of animals were killed between 14 and 44 weeks of age for analysis of glucose-6-phosphatase (G6Pase)-deficient foci and hepatic tumors. The partial hepatectomy induced a regenerative response that caused both the G6Pase-deficient foci and the surrounding, histochemically normal hepatocytes to undergo several rapid rounds of division. As a result, the G6Pase-deficient foci were larger in the hepatectomized animals than in the sham operated controls. The foci in the non-hepatectomized C57BL/6J male mice grew more slowly than in the C3H/HeJ male mice [volume doubling time (Td) = 2.9 +/- 0.1 weeks and 2.0 +/- 0.6 weeks, respectively]. Following partial hepatectomy, the G6Pase-deficient foci in the C57BL/6J male mice maintained a significantly higher growth rate (Td = 2.2 +/- 0.3 weeks) than the foci in the sham operated C57BL/6J male mice. The partial hepatectomy did not have any long term effect on the growth rate of the G6Pase-deficient foci in the C3H/HeJ male mice nor in female mice of either strain. At 32 weeks of age, the mean liver tumor multiplicity for hepatectomized C57BL/6J male mice was approximately 5.3-fold greater than that for sham operated animals. In contrast, a two-thirds hepatectomy resulted in a 60% reduction in the number of liver tumors in C3H/HeJ male mice relative to sham operated mice. These data demonstrate that partial hepatectomy can act as a promoter of hepatocarcinogenesis in C57BL/6J male mice but not C3H/HeJ male mice. We propose that the Hcs gene and partial hepatectomy may promote hepatocarcinogenesis through the same pathway of growth regulation.
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Abstract
Twenty-seven patients with hepatic neoplasms were prospectively examined at 0.35 T with multisection magnetic resonance (MR) imaging during a single breath hold. The procedures included a spin-echo (SE) sequence with a repetition time (TR) of 250 or 125 msec and an echo time (TE) of 15 msec (TR/TE = 250 or 125/15) and gradient-echo (GRE) partial-flip sequences at 250 or 125/20 in phase and 250 or 125/12 out of phase (flip angle of 70 degrees). These procedures were compared with conventional multiacquisition sequences at SE 250/15 (n = 8) in the same patients. GRE partial-flip sequences with a large flip angle provided the optimum combination of contrast and signal-to-noise ratio for imaging hepatic neoplasms, with a signal-difference-to-noise ratio that for in-phase images was 93% greater and for out-of-phase images was 53% greater than that of the SE images. The use of in-phase TEs was preferable to maintain tissue contrast, and presaturation pulses were employed to eliminate vascular pulsation artifacts. All breath-hold procedures provided suppression of motion artifacts superior to that of the short TR, short TE multiacquisition SE imaging. Such sequences should become indispensable for MR imaging of the upper abdomen.
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Midfield and low-field magnetic resonance imaging of the spine. Top Magn Reson Imaging 1988; 1:11-23. [PMID: 3078534] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/04/2023]
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Abstract
Magnetic fields and RF energy have been shown to affect sickle erythrocytes in vitro. Because both strong magnetic fields and RF energy are used in MR imaging, it has been suggested that capillary blood flow in patients with sickle cell disease may be altered during MR imaging. In order to examine sickle cell blood flow during MR imaging in vivo, laser-Doppler velocimetry was performed in normal control subjects and in sickle cell subjects before, during, and after MR imaging at 0.35 and 1.5 T. Mean blood flow and patterns of blood-flow variability were compared by two hematologists. No differences were found on the recordings from each subject made before, during, and after MR imaging were compared. Blood-flow patterns generally differed between control and sickle cell subjects. Periodic oscillatory blood flow, reportedly a specific finding in sickle cell subjects, was observed in one control subject and was not consistently found in sickle cell subjects. Although energies employed during MR imaging have effects on sickle erythrocytes in vitro, our data show no changes in sickle cell blood flow during MR imaging in vivo.
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Abstract
The accuracy of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in staging invasive carcinoma of the cervix was determined retrospectively in 57 consecutive patients in whom the extent of disease was surgically confirmed. MR images were analyzed for (a) location and size of the primary tumor; (b) tumor extension to the uterine corpus, vagina, parametria, pelvic sidewall, bladder, or rectum; and (c) pelvic lymphadenopathy. The accuracy of MR imaging in determination of tumor location was 91% and for determination of tumor size within 0.5 cm, 70%. Its accuracy was 93% for vaginal extension and 88% for parametrial extension. Pelvic sidewall, bladder, and rectal involvement were accurately excluded in all patients, but the positive predictive values were 75%, 67%, and 100%, respectively. Overall, the accuracy of MR imaging in staging was 81%. MR imaging is valuable because it can accurately demonstrate tumor location, tumor size, degree of stromal penetration, and lower uterine segment involvement. It is also valuable for ruling out parametrial, pelvic sidewall, bladder, and rectal involvement.
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Body MRI: the state of use. ADMINISTRATIVE RADIOLOGY : AR 1988; 7:71. [PMID: 10286335] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/12/2023]
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Abstract
Two fast magnetic resonance (MR) imaging techniques, advanced Fourier and partial-flip imaging, were used at 0.35 T to examine 21 patients with suspected intracranial lesions; the results were quantitatively compared with a conventional spin-echo study. Both of the fast MR techniques yielded a fourfold reduction in imaging time per section. The advanced Fourier sequence showed contrast that was identical to the conventional spin-echo study with signal-to-noise ratios of 58% and 57% for the first and second echoes, respectively. The partial-flip sequence showed a contrast of 109% and 57% for lesions versus substantia alba, and 107% and 78% for substantia grisea versus substantia alba relative to the first and second echoes of the conventional spin-echo study. The partial-flip sequence was particularly sensitive to magnetic susceptibility; this produced artifacts that may undermine the usefulness of partial flip for routine screening in certain parts of the brain. However, this susceptibility significantly improved the detection of intracranial hemorrhage when compared with the spin-echo sequence, particularly when combined with phase mapping of the partial-flip study.
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Abstract
Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging was performed in 32 male patients, 20 with no abnormalities and 12 with clinically suspected undescended testes. The results were compared with ultrasonographic, computed tomographic, clinical, and surgical findings. The undescended testes were unilateral in eight patients (one had testicular duplication) and bilateral in four. Of 16 undescended testes, 15 were correctly identified on MR images. One intraabdominal testis was not seen. Testis-fat contrast at 0.35 T was optimal with a short repetition time (TR) and a short echo time (TE). At 1.5 T, good contrast was achieved with short TR/TE sequences, but the contrast was even more pronounced with even longer TR/TE parameters. In seven patients with unilateral undescended testes, the undescended and contralateral testes showed symmetrical tissue signal intensity on both T1- and T2-weighted images. In three, the undescended testis was of lower signal intensity, suggesting atrophy. MR imaging promises to become an important diagnostic tool in the detection of undescended testes.
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Abstract
Intraluminal signal in the pulmonary arteries on spin-echo, ECG-gated MR images is limited to the diastolic phase of the cardiac cycle in normal subjects. Initial experience has indicated that signal persisting during systole may be characteristic of slow blood flow associated with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) or of thrombotic material secondary to pulmonary embolism. This study analyzes our cumulative experience (31 patients) with multiphasic, double spin-echo MR for assessing PAH and/or suspected pulmonary embolism. In PAH, the abnormal systolic signal showed an intensity increase from first to second echo. This pattern was observed in 92% of PAH patients, including 100% of patients with pulmonary systolic pressures greater than or equal to 80 mm Hg and 60% of patients with pressures less than 80 mm Hg. At any focus in the pulmonary arteries, such signal disappeared at some phase of the cardiac cycle. In patients with pulmonary embolism, signal from thrombus was fixed throughout the cardiac cycle and showed little or no increase in relative intensity change from first- to second-echo image. Using this guideline, MR made six confirmed positive and four confirmed negative diagnoses of proximal pulmonary embolism, while it failed to identify thrombus in the one patient with a peripheral pulmonary embolism. Intraluminal signal in the pulmonary arteries caused by PAH or pulmonary embolism can be differentiated in most instances using multiphasic, double spin-echo, ECG-gated MR. However, at its current stage of development, the procedure does not appear to be useful for the evaluation of peripheral pulmonary embolism.
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Abstract
To assess the capability of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging to enable differentiation of adenomyosis from leiomyoma, a prospective study was performed in 21 premenopausal patients with a strong clinical suggestion of adenomyosis. Histologic findings from hysterectomy (19 patients) and biopsy specimens (two patients) showed that eight patients had adenomyosis (three focal, five diffuse) and 12 had leiomyomas (five of the 12 also had microscopic foci of adenomyosis); one patient had a normal uterus. All eight cases of adenomyosis were correctly diagnosed from MR images. On T2-weighted MR images, diffuse adenomyosis appeared as a thickening of the junctional zone, whereas focal adenomyosis appeared as a low-signal-intensity mass poorly marginated from the adjacent myometrium. Ten of the 12 leiomyomas were correctly diagnosed from MR images. In the other two cases of leiomyoma, differentiation between focal adenomyosis and leiomyoma was not possible. Microscopic foci of adenomyosis were not demonstrated with MR imaging.
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Abstract
MR imaging examinations of 20 patients with normal pancreas and of 38 patients with suspected pancreatic disease were analyzed retrospectively to evaluate the ability of MR imaging to depict the normal and abnormal pancreas, establish MR criteria for various pancreatic diseases, determine if MR imaging can distinguish among various pancreatic diseases, and compare the usefulness of MR imaging with CT. In all 20 patients with normal pancreas and in 34 of the 38 patients with suspected pancreatic disease excellent or good evaluation of the pancreas was achieved. A 0.35-T magnet (Diasonics MT/S) was used, and both T1- and T2-weighted images were needed. T1 and T2 relaxation times and MR signal intensities showed no specific pattern to allow consistent differentiation between normal and diseased pancreatic tissue or to distinguish between tumor and inflammation. In the 29 patients in whom MR and CT images could be compared, MR imaging and CT provided equivalent information in 20 (69%). In 4 patients (14%), MR imaging added information, and in 5 patients (17%) of cases, MR imaging yielded less information than CT. MR imaging of the pancreas was found to be superior to CT in selected instances, such as in the staging of pancreatic neoplasms (n = 4) and in the evaluation of pancreatic disease after surgery (n = 3). We conclude that, at present, MR imaging should not be used as the screening method for pancreatic disease but should be reserved as an adjunct when the information provided by CT is insufficient.
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Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging of a diffusely infiltrating gastric carcinoma showed a markedly thickened gastric wall with low signal intensity on T1 and T2 weighted images. The T2 relaxation of the thickened gastric wall was very short, which was consistent with the histologically proven fibrous nature of the lesion.
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Abstract
The potential of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in the detection of endometrial carcinoma and in the assessment of its extent was evaluated prospectively in 51 patients clinically suspected of having the disease. MR imaging findings were compared with the results of surgical-pathologic staging and lymph node sampling following hysterectomy. Histologic findings showed 45 patients to have endometrial carcinoma, three to have no residual tumor after dilatation and curettage, and three to have adenomatous hyperplasia of the endometrium. MR imaging demonstrated an endometrial abnormality in 43 of the 51 patients (84%). Endometrial carcinoma could not be differentiated from adenomatous hyperplasia or blood clots. Therefore, MR imaging was not specific for tumor detection, and histologic diagnosis remains essential. The overall accuracy of MR imaging in staging endometrial carcinoma was 92%; its overall accuracy in demonstrating the depth of myometrial invasion was 82%. Demonstration of lymphadenopathy and adnexal or peritoneal metastases by MR imaging was suboptimal.
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Carcinomatous encephalitis: CT and MR findings. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 1987; 8:553-4. [PMID: 3111217 PMCID: PMC8331880] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/04/2023]
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Gated acquisition of MR images of the thorax: advantages for the study of the hila and mediastinum. Magn Reson Imaging 1987; 5:57-63. [PMID: 3586873 DOI: 10.1016/0730-725x(87)90484-x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/06/2023]
Abstract
Gated and nongated magnetic resonance (MR) scans of the chest were compared in five normal volunteers and 20 patients with chest disease to determine possible advantages of gated MR for delineation of noncardiac mediastinal anatomy. In order to compare gated and nongated images of the chest using similar imaging parameters, five spin-echo sequences were obtained in each of five normal volunteers: TR: 1000 msec, TE: 30 msec; gated to every heart beat (TR approximately 1000 msec, TE: 30 msec); TR: 2000 msec, TE: 30 msec; gated to every other heart beat (TR approximately 2000 msec), TE: 30 msec; TR: 500 msec, TE: 30 msec. In the 20 patients, the gated images were gated to every heart beat and the nongated images were obtained using a TR of 2000 msec, both with a TE of 30 msec. The noise in the periphery and in the center of the gated and nongated images at the level of the carina was compared in the five normal volunteers, using the signal intensity of the posterior chest wall as a control. There was 92% +/- 44% greater noise in the central region and 63% +/- 60% greater noise in the peripheral region on the nongated studies (TR: 1000 msec), than on the studies gated to every heart beat. In three of the five volunteers, the measured noise was greater on the nongated long TR (2000 msec) images than on the images gated to every other heart beat. However, the mediastinal structures below the level of the aortic arch were much better defined on the gated images in all five subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Abstract
Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging characteristics of uterine gestational trophoblastic neoplasia were prospectively studied in nine women (aged 21-58 years). MR imaging was done at the time of initial clinical diagnosis, after each of the first two cycles of chemotherapy, and 6-9 months after initiation of chemotherapy. Sagittal and transverse MR images of the pelvis were generated with a 0.35-T superconducting magnet and the double spin-echo technique with short and long repetition times (TRs). The neoplasm distorted the MR appearance of uterine zonal structures (myometrium, endometrium, and junctional zone) and demonstrated hypervascular masses of heterogeneous signal intensity. Favorable response to chemotherapy was determined by a decrease in serum beta-subunit human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) concentrations, and was accompanied by MR findings of regression of vascular abnormalities, development of intralesional hemorrhage, and return of normal appearance of uterine zones. The return of uterine zonal anatomy on MR images antedated definitive decrease in uterine volume. All eight patients imaged 6-9 months after initial imaging showed normal uterine volume and zonal anatomy.
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Abstract
MRI demonstrated perivalvular infectious pseudoaneurysms in three patients who had infective endocarditis that complicated cardiac surgery. In each case the infectious pseudoaneurysm, or abscess cavity, demonstrated absence of MR signal, consistent with the free flow of blood between it and the vessel lumen. Cardiac-gated MR images showed the precise location of the three infectious pseudoaneurysms in relation to the cardiac chambers: One was between the aortic root and left atrium; another was in the outflow portion of the ventricular septum; and the third surrounded the Rastelli conduit. Noninvasiveness, independence from the need for IV contrast material, precision in determining the site of the infectious pseudoaneurysm, and the lack of image artifacts produced by prosthetic valves make MRI a useful technique for detecting infectious cardiac pseudoaneurysms.
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Abstract
Bowel peristalsis degrades magnetic resonance images of the pelvis. This degradation can be minimized by bowel preparation or by intramuscular administration of glucagon.
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Abstract
The role of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in the detection of gallbladder disease was evaluated in 39 individuals (16 healthy, five with asymptomatic gallstones, and 18 with clinical symptoms of gallbladder disease). MR imaging was performed after they fasted for 12 hours. Imaging sequences included a combination of repetition times (TR) of 0.5 and 1.5 sec and echo times (TE) of 28 and 56 msec. On the images obtained at TR = 0.5 sec and TE = 56 msec, gallbladder bile was hyperintense compared with the liver in all healthy and asymptomatic subjects and was hypointense (n = 9), isointense (n = 4), or hyperintense (n = 5) in symptomatic patients, eight of whom had surgical confirmation of cholecystitis. Comparison of normal versus pathologically proved cases for the presence of gallbladder disease yielded a specificity of 100%, sensitivity of 75%, and a significant difference of P less than .01. Thus, with a pulse sequence of TR = 0.5 sec and TE = 56 msec, MR was sensitive in detecting gallbladder disease. However, the role of MR in the radiologic workup of gallbladder disease will be determined by more experience with this modality.
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Electron microscopic demonstration of lysosomal inclusion bodies in lung, liver, lymph nodes, and blood leukocytes of patients with amiodarone pulmonary toxicity. Am J Med 1985; 78:506-12. [PMID: 2983550 DOI: 10.1016/0002-9343(85)90346-8] [Citation(s) in RCA: 101] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/03/2023]
Abstract
The mechanism of amiodarone-induced pulmonary toxicity is unknown. Two cases of amiodarone pulmonary toxicity are presented in which abnormal inclusion bodies containing whorls of membrane were seen on electron microscopy of extrapulmonary tissues. These cytoplasmic lysosomal inclusion bodies were observed in lymphocytes, plasma cells, granulocytes, tissue macrophages, and hepatocytes. These widespread histopathologic changes in extrapulmonary tissues and in a variety of cell types are similar to more extensively investigated findings in animal models that are thought to represent a drug-induced lysosomal storage disease, phospholipidosis.
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Abstract
Amiodarone is an amphiphilic iodinated compound that is used as a treatment for refractory ventricular arrhythmias. During evaluation for possible pulmonary toxicity, a patient receiving amiodarone was noted to have an increase in the density of his liver as seen on computed tomographic (CT) scanning of the abdomen. Six additional patients who were receiving amiodarone were subsequently evaluated to ascertain the frequency of this finding. The CT density of the liver was increased in all patients. Values obtained varied from 95 to 145 H, with a mean of 117 +/- 8.9 (normal, 30-70). The alkaline phosphatase was elevated in four patients, but only one had an elevation of either the alanine or aspartate aminotransferase. Two patients underwent liver biopsies, and both revealed membranous lamellar phospholipid-containing structures within hepatocytes. Animal studies done to recreate these findings revealed that amiodarone accumulated in the liver at concentrations 175-500 times greater than those found in serum. Quantitative measurements of iodine in samples from the same liver showed that the iodine levels were correspondingly elevated. In the treated animals, there was a small but statistically significant increase in the CT density of the liver, whereas the values for untreated animals were unchanged. Treatment with amiodarone leads to an accumulation in the liver of this iodinated compound and hence an increase in the CT density of the liver. This accumulation of the drug in hepatic lysosomes apparently causes a secondary phospholipidosis.
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Abstract
Right ventricular function was studied in 60 patients with equilibrium gated radionuclide angiography. The mean (+/- standard deviation) right ventricular ejection fraction in 20 normal subjects was 53 +/- 6 percent, a value in agreement with previous data from both radionuclide and contrast angiographic studies. This value was similar (55 +/- 7 percent) in 11 patients with coronary artery disease but normal left ventricular function. Radionuclide measurements of right ventricular ejection fraction were correlated with right heart hemodynamics. There was a significant negative linear correlation between right ventricular ejection fraction and mean pulmonary arterial pressure (r = -0.82) and between right ventricular ejection fraction and right ventricular end-diastolic pressure (4 = -0.67). Furthermore, patients with elevated right ventricular end-diastolic pressure and mean pulmonary arterial pressure had a more severely depressed ejection fraction than did those with an elevated mean pulmonary arterial pressure alone. Thus, an abnormal value for right ventricular ejection fraction by gated radionuclide angiography in the absence of primary right ventricular volume overload suggests abnormal right heart pressures, whereas a normal value excludes severe pulmonary arterial hypertension or an elevated right ventricular end-diastolic pressure.
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