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[Invasive diagnostic procedures for insulinomas of the pancreas]

Authors :
G, Nöldge
M-A, Weber
R A, Ritzel
M J, Werner
H-U, Kauczor
L, Grenacher
Source :
Der Radiologe. 49(3)
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Insulinomas are the most common cause for hypoglycemia with endogenous hyperinsulinism. Insulinomas are the most frequent endocrine tumor of the pancreas and 10% occur as multiple tumors (e.g. multiple endocrine neoplasia type I) or in rare cases as islet cell hyperplasia. A further 10-15% of insulinomas are malignant. Non-invasive imaging modalities, such as computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), ultrasonography (US) and somatoreceptor scintigraphy (SRN) show a lower sensitivity for detection and localization of tumors, because in many cases insulinomas are smaller than 2 cm in size. Invasive pre-operative diagnostic procedures, such as transhepatic peripancreatic venous blood sampling (TPVB) and the intra-arterial calcium stimulation test (ASVS) are much more time-intensive compared to CT, MRI and US with an examination time of 2-3 h but achieve a more exact pre-operative detection and localization with sensitivities mostly greater than 95% and are therefore the diagnostic methods of choice.

Details

Language :
German
ISSN :
14322102
Volume :
49
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Der Radiologe
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........4b27ee21bcdc58a3a08b07309fbbe7ad