Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

    Surgery. 1987 Dec;102(6):1018-26.

    Differentiation of adrenal masses by magnetic resonance imaging.

    Doppman JL, Reinig JW, Dwyer AJ, Frank JP, Norton J, Loriaux DL, Keiser H.

    Diagnostic Radiology Department, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD 20892.

    Eighty-one adrenal masses in 68 patients were examined with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Masses included nonfunctioning adenomas (17), metastases (25), adrenocortical carcinomas (10), and pheochromocytomas (23). T1-weighted pulse sequences depicted the anatomy with a resolution comparable to that of computed tomography (CT). T2-weighted pulse sequences provided some histologic specificity separating nonfunctioning adenomas with low signal-intensity from metastases with intermediate signal-intensity and pheochromocytomas with high signal-intensity. Pheochromocytomas could always be distinguished from other adrenal masses. In 20% of the cases, metastases with low signal-intensity could not be distinguished from nonfunctioning adenomas.

    PMID: 3686342 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    Supplemental Content