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Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Peritoneal Cavity among Peritoneal Dialysis Patients, Using the Dialysate as 'Contrast Medium'

Authors :
Eva Seiringer
Thomas Muhr
Friedrich C. Prischl
Wolfgang Artmann
Manfred Wallner
Siegfried Funk
Reinhard Kramar
Gert Kronabethleitner
Source :
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. 13:197-203
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2002.

Abstract

The objectives of this study were to evaluate whether adequate observation of abdominal pathologic features related to peritoneal dialysis (PD) was possible with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) under routine conditions, i.e., against the background of the dialysate and without contrast medium. For 16 male and seven female patients (mean age, 51.8 +/- 15.0 yr; mean duration of PD, 324 +/- 542 d), 25 peritoneal MRI studies were performed with the intraperitoneal dialysate as usual. Indications were symptoms or combinations of symptoms, such as leakage or abdominal wall edema (n = 3), bloody dialysate (n = 4), suspected herniation (n = 1), suspected ultrafiltration failure (n = 2), and abdominal pain (n = 5), or routine assessment after initiation of PD (n = 12). The MRI protocol, which was performed with a 1.0-T scanner, consisted of breath-hold, coronal and transverse, T2-weighted, half-Fourier single-shot turbo spin-echo sequences, using a standard body-array coil. MRI studies were well tolerated and successfully completed for all except two patients. Results indicated a leak along the catheter (n = 1), a leak in an umbilical hernia (n = 1), suspected leakage (n = 1), hernias (n = 5, in three patients), intraperitoneal adhesions (n = 5, in four patients), a ruptured ovarian cyst (n = 1), and pleural effusions (n = 4). Pathologic findings unrelated to PD or located extra-abdominally were observed in 19 of the 25 studies. The catheter tip position was easily identified for all patients. In conclusion, this first report on peritoneal MRI using only dialysate as the "contrast medium" indicates that MRI permits detailed observation of all relevant, PD-related, abdominal pathologic features against the dialysate background, thus avoiding system contamination (and thus the risk of peritonitis).

Details

ISSN :
10466673
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0b50e33154cda17f51ce4ac5541802c2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1681/asn.v131197