Abdominal 64-MDCT for Suspected Appendicitis: The Use of Oral and IV Contrast Material Versus IV Contrast Material Only

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Abdominal 64-MDCT for Suspected Appendicitis: The Use of Oral and IV Contrast Material Versus IV Contrast Material Only"

Transcription

1 Gastrointestinal Imaging Original Research Anderson et al. Use of Contrast Material for MDCT of Suspected Appendicitis Gastrointestinal Imaging Original Research Stephan W. Anderson 1 Jorge A. Soto 1 Brian C. Lucey 1 Al Ozonoff 1,2 Jacqueline D. Jordan 1 Jirair Ratevosian 1 Andrew S. Ulrich 3 Niels K. Rathlev 3 Patricia M. Mitchell 3 Casey Rebholz 3 James A. Feldman 3 James T. Rhea 1 Anderson SW, Soto JA, Lucey BC, et al. Keywords: appendicitis, contrast media, CT, diverticulitis, emergency medicine, MDCT DOI: /AJR Received January 16, 2009; accepted after revision May 11, Please see the commentary on this article and the article by Keyzer et al., which appears on the preceding pages. 1 Department of Radiology, Boston University Medical Center, 88 E Newton St., 2nd Fl., Boston, MA Address correspondence to S. W. Anderson (stephan.anderson@bmc.org). 2 Department of Biostatistics, Boston University, Boston, MA. 3 Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, MA. AJR 2009; 193: X/09/ American Roentgen Ray Society Abdominal 64-MDCT for Suspected Appendicitis: The Use of Oral and IV Contrast Material Versus IV Contrast Material Only OBJECTIVE. The objective of our study was to compare the diagnostic accuracy of IV contrast-enhanced 64-MDCT with and without the use of oral contrast material in diagnosing appendicitis in patients with abdominal pain. MATERIALS AND METHODS. We conducted a randomized trial of a convenience sample of adult patients presenting to an urban academic emergency department with acute nontraumatic abdominal pain and clinical suspicion of appendicitis, diverticulitis, or smallbowel obstruction. Patients were enrolled between 8 am and 11 pm when research assistants were present. Consenting subjects were randomized into one of two groups: Group 1 subjects underwent 64-MDCT performed with oral and IV contrast media and group 2 subjects underwent 64-MDCT performed solely with IV contrast material. Three expert radiologists independently reviewed the CT examinations, evaluating for the presence of appendicitis. Each radiologist interpreted 202 examinations, ensuring that each examination was interpreted by two radiologists. Individual reader performance and a combined interpretation performance of the two readers assigned to each case were calculated. In cases of disagreement, the third reader was asked to deliver a tiebreaker interpretation to be used to calculate the combined reader performance. Final outcome was based on operative, clinical, and follow-up data. We compared radiologic diagnoses with clinical outcomes to calculate the diagnostic accuracy of CT in both groups. RESULTS. Of the 303 patients enrolled, 151 patients (50%) were randomized to group 1 and the remaining 152 (50%) were randomized to group 2. The combined reader performance for the diagnosis of appendicitis in group 1 was a sensitivity of 100% (95% CI, %) and specificity of 97.1% (95% CI, %). The performance in group 2 was a sensitivity of 100% ( %) and specificity of 97.1% ( %). CONCLUSION. Patients presenting with nontraumatic abdominal pain imaged using 64- MDCT with isotropic reformations had similar characteristics for the diagnosis of appendicitis when IV contrast material alone was used and when oral and IV contrast media were used. C T protocols for evaluating patients presenting with acute nontraumatic abdominal pain, including appendicitis, commonly include the use of oral and IV contrast agents [1 4]. Recently, several studies have suggested that oral contrast material may not be necessary in these patients [5, 6]. The clinical implications of examining a patient with nontraumatic abdominal pain without oral contrast material are multiple and are important. A published comparison of two groups of patients presenting emergently with abdominal pain one of whom received oral contrast material and the other who did not revealed a significant reduction in the time to eventual disposition after admission to the emergency department (ED) [7]. For suspected appendicitis, a method of reducing the bowel preparation time using rectal administration of barium also yielded predictable decreases in the duration of patient stay in the ED [8]. Other clinical implications of oral contrast material use include, first, the risk of aspiration; second, the need for nasogastric tubes in patients with severe emesis or who are unable to tolerate orally administered contrast material; and, third, the increased examination cost and potential adverse effects of the oral contrast material. The 64-MDCT technology affords a considerable reduction in scanning time and an improvement in image quality, derived from the isotropic voxel data sets and 1282 AJR:193, November 2009

2 Use of Contrast Material for MDCT of Suspected Appendicitis very short scanning times, that result in minimal degradation from motion artifact. Multiplanar reformations particularly benefit from isotropic data sets. Recent work in patients presenting with an acute abdomen has shown 64-MDCT to be of benefit by increasing reader confidence and interobserver agreement in diagnosis [9]. Similar benefits have previously been described using MDCT technology in patients with abdominal pain [10, 11]. In light of the enhanced image quality afforded by 64-MDCT, we sought to critically evaluate the need for oral contrast material given the known improvement in ED duration of stay without its use. Therefore, the purpose of our study was to conduct a randomized trial to compare the diagnostic performance of IV contrast-enhanced 64-MDCT performed with oral contrast material versus without oral contrast material in patients presenting to the ED with acute nontraumatic abdominal pain clinically suspected to be secondary to appendicitis, diverticulitis, or small-bowel obstruction. For the purposes of this article, the effects of these two CT protocols on the diagnosis of appendicitis are evaluated. Materials and Methods Patient Population This randomized clinical trial was approved by our institutional review board and was conducted in a HIPAA-compliant fashion. We enrolled a convenience sample of adult subjects who presented to the ED with acute abdominal pain. Included were adults 21 years old or older with nontraumatic abdominal pain and differential considerations of abdominal pain including appendicitis, diverticulitis, and small-bowel obstruction. The age of 21 years old or older was chosen because patient recruitment occurred in the adults ED; patients younger than 21 years are seen in the pediatric ED in our institution. We excluded patients with an IV contrast allergy, pregnant patients, patients with a traumatic cause of abdominal pain, patients with positive β-hcg findings, patients unable to provide a telephone number for a 24-hour followup call, and patients unable to provide written informed consent. A convenience sample of patients was recruited for this study between April 2006 and February 2007; the duration of the study was based on the time required to recruit the number of patients determined by power calculations, which we discuss later. Research assistants who had been trained by ED physicians in screening for and recruiting potential patients screened all ED patients Monday through Friday from 8 am to 11 pm. A convenience sample is a sample of patients recruited at the convenience of the researcher, given the defined hours of screening in the ED by the research assistants in this protocol. Three hundred three patients (140 men, 163 women; mean age of men, 42 years; mean age of women, 44 years) were enrolled in this study. After providing written informed consent, subjects were randomized into one of two groups: abdominal CT performed with both oral and IV contrast material (group 1) or abdominal CT performed solely with IV contrast material (group 2). Group 1 included 75 men and 76 women with a mean age of 43 years (range, years), and group 2 included 65 men and 87 women with a mean age of 43 years (range, years). After discharge from the ED, all patients were followed up 24 hours and 6 weeks later via a telephone questionnaire administered by a research assistant. Additionally, electronic medical records at our institution were reviewed 72 hours after patient discharge to ensure that patients had not returned to the ED with continued symptoms. If patients could not be contacted by telephone at the 6-week interval, electronic medical records were reviewed and evaluated for any additional ED or outpatient visits with ongoing abdominal symptoms. Adult patient presents with clinical suspicion of acute appendicitis to emergency department Group 1: Oral and IV contrast-enhanced CT Agreement Study recruitment Randomization Images interpreted by two of three emergency radiologists Comparison to reference standard CT Technique CT examinations were performed using a 64- MDCT scanner (LightSpeed VCT, GE Healthcare). Portal venous phase CT images were acquired from the diaphragm to the greater trochanters with the following parameters: slice thickness, 1.25 mm; reconstruction interval, 1.25 mm; pitch, 1:0.987; noise factor, 19 (automatic attenuation-based dose modulation); and rotation time, 0.5 second. The direct multiplanar reformation function was used to generate coronal and sagittal reformations with a slice thickness of 2.5 mm and a reconstruction interval of 2.5 mm. All patients received 100 ml of ioversol (Optiray 350 mg I/mL, Mallinckrodt Imaging) administered via power injection through an IV cannula located in an antecubital or hand vein at a rate of 4 ml/s. We routinely use a dual-syringe power injector (Stellant CT Injection System, Medrad) to administer a 30-mL normal saline chasing bolus immediately after the injection of IV contrast material. The saline bolus was also injected at 4 ml/s. The acquisition of portal venous phase images started 70 seconds after the initiation of the injection of IV contrast material. Patients randomized to group 1 received our department s standard positive oral contrast preparation (900 ml of 2.2% barium sulfate suspension [Medescan barium sulfate, Lafayette Pharmaceuticals]). According to department protocol, a 2-hour preparatory time was used to ensure adequate bowel opacification. Image Analysis Three expert radiologists with 8 20 years of experience interpreting emergent abdominal CT scans independently interpreted the CT images at PACS workstations (Centricity, GE Healthcare). At the conclusion of subject enrollment, each radiologist was given an electronic sequential list of 202 patients (101 from group 1 and 101 from group 2) by an independent investigator, thus ensuring that each CT examination was interpreted by two radiologists. The scans were interpreted so that for the three possible pairings of the observers, there were 101 cases of overlap interpreted by two radiologists independently (Fig. 1). The radiologists were asked to assess for the presence of Group 2: IV contrastenhanced CT Adjudication by third emergency radiologist Fig. 1 Patient flowchart details time course from emergency department presentation to combined image interpretation paradigm involved in this study. AJR:193, November

3 Anderson et al. appendicitis. Additionally, they were instructed to determine their confidence in diagnosis using the following scale of 1 5 for each case: 1, definitely not present; 2, probably not present; 3, indeterminate; 4, probably present; or 5, definitely present. Appendicitis was considered present on CT images when the appendiceal diameter was enlarged with evidence of periappendiceal stranding (Figs. 2 and 3). Other signs consistent with a diagnosis of appendicitis included a fluid-filled lumen and hyperenhancement of the appendiceal mucosa as well as the absence of filling with oral contrast material when oral contrast material was seen within the cecum. The radiologists interpreted the studies using axial images and sagittal and coronal reformations. They completed a data collection form for each patient, documenting the presence or absence of appendicitis as well as their confidence level using the scale mentioned. Once the combined interpretations were compared with the standard of reference, two of the radiologists responsible for the combined interpretation retrospectively evaluated all false-negative and false-positive interpretations by consensus to provide a possible explanation for each misinterpretation. To assess the adequacy of our routine oral contrast preparation, a single radiologist evaluated the examinations of all patients who received the oral contrast preparation and noted the distal most point of oral contrast opacification. Fig. 2 True-positive interpretation of acute appendicitis in 47-year-old man. Axial IV contrastenhanced CT image obtained without oral contrast material reveals dilated appendix with significant periappendiceal fat stranding (arrow). The radiologist recorded the distal most point of opacification using the following categories: stomach, proximal small bowel, mid small bowel, distal small bowel, cecum, ascending colon, hepatic flexure, transverse colon, splenic flexure, descending colon, sigmoid colon, or rectum. Standard of Reference A review of the patients electronic medical records was undertaken by a single investigator who was blinded to CT results to determine clinical outcomes, including operative management. The determination of clinical outcomes also was based on follow-up information obtained 24 hours and 6 weeks after discharge from the ED using telephone questionnaires, which included any additional clinical information from ED visits or hospital admission in the interim. Also, clinical information from review of electronic medical record reviews 72 hours after ED discharge in all patients and 6 weeks after discharge in patients not contacted by telephone was factored into the A Fig. 3 True-positive interpretation of acute appendicitis in 26-year-old man. A, Sagittal IV contrast-enhanced CT image obtained with oral contrast material reveals contrast material opacification of proximal appendiceal lumen (arrow). B, Sagittal image of distal appendix shows lack of contrast opacification, distention, and periappendiceal inflammation (arrow), which are consistent with acute appendicitis. B 1284 AJR:193, November 2009

4 Use of Contrast Material for MDCT of Suspected Appendicitis clinical outcome determination. Appendicitis was considered present only when patients underwent operative intervention and pathologic analysis yielded a diagnosis of acute appendicitis. Statistical Analysis To determine the necessary sample size, we assumed 40% prevalence of a positive diagnosis of appendicitis, diverticulitis, or small-bowel obstruction using a one-sided comparison of proportions across the two arms with a significance level of The effect size of interest was a difference in either sensitivity or specificity of 90% versus 70%, respectively. We calculated an effective sample size of 303 subjects that would be required to provide 80% power. Once all interpretations were completed by the three radiologists, an independent investigator reviewed the data collection forms to determine interobserver agreement. Interpretations scored 1 and 2 were considered negative interpretations, and those scored 4 and 5 were considered positive interpretations. Interpretations scored 3 were considered false-positive or false-negative depending on whether the standard of reference showed the diagnosis to be absent or present, respectively. If both observers agreed on the presence or absence of the diagnosis, that combined interpretation was considered final and was compared with the standard of reference to calculate the following parameters of diagnostic performance: sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV). In cases in which there was disagreement between the two readers (scored as negative by one reader and positive by the other), a blinded third reader was asked to interpret the examination. In these cases of disagreement, the third reader was the third expert radiologist who was not originally assigned to interpret that particular examination. For cases in which either one or both of the expert interpretations was indeterminate (scored 3), the third reader also rendered an interpretation; this third read acted as the tiebreaker to yield the final (i.e., combined) interpretation of the study (Fig. 1). Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves for each expert were created, and the areas under the ROC curves (AUCs) were calculated. These calculations and comparisons between the AUC values for group 1 versus group 2 were carried out for each radiologist. AUCs were calculated using a software package (ROCR package, version 1.0.2, 2007) for the R statistical system (version 2.0.1, R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna University of Technology, Vienna, Austria) [12]. The ROC calculations used the aforementioned 5-point confidence scale. The interpretations of the individual observers were compared with the clinical outcomes to determine the sensitivity, specificity, PPV, and NPV for the diagnosis of appendicitis using the R statistical system. The performance of observers 1, 2, and 3 was calculated based on the 202 examinations interpreted by each. Using the Fisher s exact test, we compared the sensitivity and specificity of the combined interpretations of the two groups for the diagnosis of appendicitis. One-sided tests were used only for the purposes of sample size calculations. All other comparisons and reported p values are two-tailed, nondirectional tests. Kappa values for interobserver agreement were calculated for each reader pair (101 studies per pair) using the method of Fleiss kappa [13]. The levels of agreement were interpreted as follows: 0.20, poor agreement; , fair agreement; 0.41 A 0.60, moderate agreement; , good agreement; and , very good agreement. The kappa values for each pair of observers were calculated based on the 101 examinations of overlap that existed for each pair of the three observers. For kappa value calculations, interpretations of 1 and 2 were considered negative; 4 and 5, positive; and 3, equivalent only to another interpretation of 3. Results Based on the results of the standards of reference, 27 (9%) of the 303 patients were diagnosed with appendicitis. Of the 303 patients, 121 patients (40%) were successfully contacted 24 hours after discharge from the ED and 155 patients (51%) were successfully contacted at 6 weeks. Additionally, nine patients (3%) returned to our institution for care within the 6-week follow-up interval: Two patients were admitted, six patients were seen in the ED and discharged, and one patient returned for a follow-up visit. Appendicitis Fourteen (9%) of the 151 patients in group 1 and 13 (9%) of the 152 patients in group 2 had a final diagnosis of acute appendicitis based on operative intervention and histopathologic correlation. All patients who underwent operative intervention were found to have appendicitis. There were 14 true-positive, 133 true-negative, four false-positive, and 0 false-negative interpretations for the CT examinations based on the combined interpretations for group 1. There were 12 true-positive, 136 true-negative, four false-positive, and 0 false-negative interpretations for the CT examinations based B Fig. 4 False-positive interpretation for acute appendicitis in case of surgically resected appendiceal mucocele in 43-year-old man. A and B, Axial (A) and coronal (B) oral and IV contrastenhanced images show marked enlargement of appendix with mild periappendiceal fat stranding (arrows). This case represents false-positive interpretation for acute appendicitis. AJR:193, November

5 Anderson et al. on the combined interpretations for group 2. On retrospective consensus review of the four false-positive misinterpretations of appendicitis in group 1, the radiologists thought that three of the cases were equivocal in that the caliber of the appendix was slightly enlarged with questionable mild hyperenhancement of the appendiceal mucosa but there was a lack of periappendiceal inflammatory changes. The final false-positive in this group was a markedly abnormal appendix, which on pathology was shown to be an appendiceal mucocele, that had been misinterpreted as an abscess by the radiologists. In retrospect, the radiologists thought that the absence of significant stranding surrounding the mucocele would be atypical for an abscess (Fig. 4). On consensus review of the four false-positive misinterpretations of appendicitis in group 2, these cases were thought to be equivocal with apparent hyperenhancing wall and appendiceal caliber at the upper limits of normal but without surrounding appendiceal stranding. Statistical Analysis In constructing ROC curves for the three radiologists, AUCs were calculated. A comparison of the AUC values between the two groups for each radiologist is shown in Table 1. Routinely used Monte Carlo permutations were A Fig. 5 True-positive interpretation of acute appendicitis with lack of oral contrast opacification of colon in 39-year-old man. A and B, Axial (A) and coronal (B) oral and IV contrast-enhanced images show distended appendix (arrows), consistent with acute appendicitis, and oral contrast opacification terminating in proximal small bowel. used to calculate p values, and no statistically significant differences in the AUC values were found between the two groups [14, 15]. Using Fisher s exact test, comparisons of sensitivity and specificity between the combined interpretations for the diagnosis of appendicitis were carried out (Table 2). Although there was no significant difference in sensitivity or specificity for the diagnosis of appendicitis, our sample size limits the conclusion we can draw from this finding. In 11 cases, there was disagreement between the two interpreting radiologists and the third radiologist interpreted the case, serving as a tiebreaker. Of these 11 cases necessitating a third interpretation, 10 were in group 2. Interobserver agreement for the diagnoses of appendicitis was also calculated (Table 3). Interobserver agreement was variable for the three diagnoses and ranged from poor to very good. Position of Oral Contrast Material The position of the distal most extent of the orally administered contrast material was recorded in all patients in group 1. All patients ingested the entire amount of oral contrast material; however, vomiting during administration was neither controlled for nor recorded. The distal most position of the contrast material was as follows: the stomach, n = 6 (4%); proximal small bowel, n = 8 (5%); mid small bowel, n = 21 (14%); distal small bowel, n = 13 (9%); cecum, n = 8 (5%); ascending colon, n = 8 (5%); hepatic flexure, n = 5 (3%); transverse colon, n = 19 (13%); splenic flexure, n = 8 (5%); descending colon, n = 22 (15%); sigmoid colon, n = 11 (7%); and rectum, n = 22 (15%). Of TABLE 1: Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) Curve Analysis Reader Diagnosis AUC Group 1 a Group 2 b p Lower Limit Upper Limit AUC Lower Limit Upper Limit 1 Appendicitis Appendicitis Appendicitis Note AUC = area under ROC curve. a Group 1 subjects underwent 64-MDCT performed with oral and IV contrast material. b Group 2 subjects underwent 64-MDCT performed solely with IV contrast material. B 1286 AJR:193, November 2009

6 Use of Contrast Material for MDCT of Suspected Appendicitis TABLE 2: Reader Performance in Diagnosing Appendicitis Using 64-MDCT With Oral and IV Contrast Material or IV Contrast Material Alone Reader 1 Reader Sensitivity (%) Specificity (%) Positive Predictive Value (%) Negative Predictive Value (%) Group 1 a 100 [ %] 97.8 [ %] 80.0 [ %] 100 [ %] Group 2 b 88.9 [ %] 99.0 [ %] 88.9 [ %] 99.0 [ %] Reader 2 Group 1 a 100 [ %] 96.8 [ %] 80.0 [ %] 100 [ %] Group 2 b 90.0 [ %] 93.9 [ %] 60.0 [ %] 98.9 [ %] Reader 3 Group 1 a 100 [ %] 100 [ %] 100 [ %] 100 [ %] Group 2 b 77.8 [ %] 98.8 [ %] 87.5 [ %] 97.6 [ %] Readers combined Group 1 a 100 [ %] 97.1 [ %] 77.8 [ %] 100 [ %] Group 2 b 100 [ %] 97.1 [ %] 75.0 [ %] 100 [ %] p Note The data in brackets are the 95% CIs. a Group 1 subjects underwent 64-MDCT performed with oral and IV contrast material. b Group 2 subjects underwent 64-MDCT performed solely with IV contrast material. the 14 patients with appendicitis, five patients (36%) had oral contrast material opacification only to the point of the mid or distal small bowel (Fig. 5). The remaining nine patients (64%) were noted to have oral contrast material that extended to the cecum or beyond. Discussion To date, relatively few trials comparing various CT protocols for evaluating nontraumatic abdominal pain in patients presenting to the ED have been published [5]. In light of advancing MDCT technology and the increasing significance of ED length of stay as well as patient discomfort related to ingesting oral contrast material in those presenting with acute abdominal symptoms, we sought to critically evaluate whether oral contrast material continues to be needed in this patient population of ED patients presenting with abdominal pain, which represents a large proportion of patients imaged with CT [7]. With regard to the need for IV contrast material in the evaluation of nontraumatic abdominal pain, studies have shown increased sensitivity in diagnosing appendicitis with the administration of IV contrast material [16]. IV contrast material has also been proven to be particularly useful in diagnosing the complications of common causes of abdominal pain [4, 17]. Therefore, we believe that the benefits afforded by the use of IV contrast material outweigh the risks in patients with nontraumatic abdominal pain. Appendicitis The benefits of oral contrast material for simplifying the diagnosis of appendicitis have been questioned [18]. Investigators have shown that oral contrast material does not reliably fill the appendiceal lumen of healthy patients and, therefore, a lack of filling is not always an indicator of acute appendicitis [19]. Although filling of the appendix may help to exclude appendicitis, this is shown to occur in only 61% of normal appendices [19]. The most useful CT findings in diagnosing appendicitis that have been described include an enlarged appendix, appendiceal wall thickening, periappendiceal fat stranding, and appendiceal wall enhancement, none of which is particularly aided by the administration of oral contrast material [20]. Interestingly, the combined interpretation results for the comparison of the sensitivity and specificity of the two groups in diagnosing appendicitis were similar; however, the sensitivity of each individual reader is, in all cases, lower, but the sample size limits the conclusions that can be drawn from this finding. Nevertheless, this is an interesting finding that deserves further research and that has previously been shown based on a systematic review of the literature [18]. In 32% of the patients in group 1, the oral contrast material did not extend to the level of the colon. Although this represents a confounder in comparing the two groups of patients, the oral contrast group did receive a controlled, 2-hour preparatory time, which is routine in many institutions. Therefore, the position of the oral contrast material likely reflects clinical practice. Interobserver Agreement Interobserver agreement ranged significantly, from poor to very good. This finding may partly reflect the inherent subjectivity involved in the diagnosis of appendicitis on CT. The lack of pertinent clinical information, which is often particularly useful in the diagnosis of appendicitis, was a possible contributing factor in the wide range of the kappa values. All three radiologists had experience interpreting abdominopelvic CT examinations with IV contrast material in the absence of oral contrast material (3 7 years TABLE 3: Kappa Values for Interobserver Agreement Between Observer Pairs for the Diagnosis of Appendicitis Observer Pair Group 1 a κ Group 2 b 1 and and and a Group 1 subjects underwent 64-MDCT performed with oral and IV contrast material. b Group 2 subjects underwent 64-MDCT performed solely with IV contrast material. AJR:193, November

7 Anderson et al. of experience) because our blunt trauma CT protocols do not use oral contrast material. Limitations Limitations of this study include the fact that the expert emergency radiologists were asked to evaluate for the diagnosis of appendicitis, thereby priming them to scrutinize the CT scans for this finding. Although possibly increasing sensitivity over what may be expected in practice, such a study design may also lower specificity because of overcalling this diagnosis. The fact that this study enrolled a convenience sample of patients, given the limited recruitment times in the ED, imposes a limitation: Namely, the sample does not represent consecutive enrollment and may inaccurately represent our larger patient population. For example, it may be easier for employed patients to visit the ED before work or on the weekends, yielding a somewhat skewed patient sample. Finally, the study was powered assuming a prevalence of 40% of any one of three diagnoses (appendicitis, diverticulitis, or smallbowel obstruction). For the purposes of this article, the diagnosis of appendicitis was evaluated. For an evaluation of a single diagnosis, the study is slightly overpowered to detect a difference in specificity and, conversely, is slightly underpowered to detect a difference in sensitivity. We have greater than 80% power to detect between-group differences in specificity and less than 80% power to detect differences in sensitivity. Comparisons of diagnostic sensitivity for individual diagnoses or individual readers are also underpowered; thus, a failure to reject the null hypothesis of no difference cannot necessarily be interpreted to mean there is no true difference between groups. Instead, it may reflect the relatively low power for those particular comparisons. The sample size limitations are also reflected in the wide 95% CIs, another significant limitation in drawing conclusions from comparisons between the two groups. Previously published investigations suggest that the difference in sensitivity or specificity for using or not using enteric contrast material in the diagnosis of appendicitis is less than 10% [18]. Our study was not powered to detect a difference of this magnitude. However, ours is the largest study, to our knowledge, that has directly compared the use of oral and IV contrast material with the use of IV contrast material alone for abdominal imaging in the ED setting. In conclusion, in patients presenting with acute nontraumatic abdominal pain, there is no statistically significant difference in specificity for diagnosing appendicitis identified in our study between CT scans obtained after the administration of oral and IV contrast media versus those obtained with the use of only IV contrast material. Given the statistical limitations conferred by the power of the study and sample size, we cannot make definitive conclusions regarding the comparative sensitivity of the two contrast preparations. References 1. Johnson PT, Horton KM, Mahesh M, Fishman EK. Multidetector computed tomography for suspected appendicitis: multi-institutional survey of 16-MDCT data acquisition protocols and review of pertinent literature. J Comput Assist Tomogr 2006; 30: Kaewlai R, Nazinitsky KJ. Acute colonic diverticulitis in a community-based hospital: CT evaluation in 138 patients. Emerg Radiol 2007; 13: Thoeni RF, Cello JP. CT imaging of colitis. Radiology 2006; 240: Sheedy SP, Earnest F 4th, Fletcher JG, Fidler JL, Hoskin TL. CT of small-bowel ischemia associated with obstruction in emergency department patients: diagnostic performance evaluation. Radiology 2006; 241: Lee SY, Coughlin B, Wolfe JM, Polino J, Blank FS, Smithline HA. Prospective comparison of helical CT of the abdomen and pelvis without and with oral contrast in assessing acute abdominal pain in adult emergency department patients. Emerg Radiol 2006; 12: Mun S, Ernst RD, Chen K, Oto A, Shah S, Mileski WJ. Rapid CT diagnosis of acute appendicitis with IV contrast material. Emerg Radiol 2006; 12: Huynh LN, Coughlin BF, Wolfe J, Blank F, Lee SY, Smithline HA. Patient encounter time intervals in the evaluation of emergency department patients requiring abdominopelvic CT: oral contrast versus no contrast. Emerg Radiol 2004; 10: Berg ER, Mehta SD, Mitchell P, Soto J, Oyama L, Ulrich A. Length of stay by route of contrast administration for diagnosis of appendicitis by computed-tomography scan. Acad Emerg Med 2006; 13: Zangos S, Steenburg SD, Philips KD, et al. Acute abdomen: added diagnostic value of coronal reformations with 64-slice multidetector row computed tomography. Acad Radiol 2007; 14: Paulson EK, Harris JP, Jaffe TA, Haugan PA, Nelson RC. Acute appendicitis: added diagnostic value of coronal reformations from isotropic voxels at multi-detector row CT. Radiology 2005; 235: Jaffe TA, Martin LC, Thomas J, Adamson AR, DeLong DM, Paulson EK. Small-bowel obstruction: coronal reformations from isotropic voxels at 16-section multi-detector row CT. Radiology 2006; 238: Fleiss JL. Measuring nominal scale agreement among many raters. Psychol Bull 1971; 76: Sing T, Sander O, Beerenwinkel N, Lengauer T. ROCR: visualizing classifier performance in R. Bioinformatics 2005; 21: Metropolis N, Ulam S. The Monte Carlo method. J Am Stat Assoc 1949; 44: Robert CP, Casella G. Monte Carlo statistical methods, 2nd ed. Berlin, Germany: Springer-Verlag, Jacobs JE, Birnbaum BA, Macari M, et al. Acute appendicitis: comparison of helical CT diagnosis focused technique with oral contrast material versus nonfocused technique with oral and intravenous contrast material. Radiology 2001; 220: Chou CK, Wu RH, Mak CW, Lin MP. Clinical significance of poor CT enhancement of the thickened small-bowel wall in patients with acute abdominal pain. AJR 2006; 186: Anderson BA, Salem L, Flum DR. A systematic review of whether oral contrast is necessary for the computed tomography diagnosis of appendicitis in adults. Am J Surg 2005; 190: Rao PM, Rhea JT, Novelline RA, et al. Helical CT technique for the diagnosis of appendicitis: prospective evaluation of a focused appendix CT examination. Radiology 1997; 202: Choi D, Park H, Lee YR, et al. The most useful findings for diagnosing acute appendicitis on contrast-enhanced helical CT. Acta Radiol 2003; 44: Kircher MF, Rhea JT, Kihiczak D, Novelline RA. Frequency, sensitivity, and specificity of individual signs of diverticulitis on thin-section helical CT with colonic contrast material: experience with 312 cases. AJR 2002; 178: Cui L, Hung HMJ, Wang SJ. Modification of sample size in group sequential clinical trials. Biometrics 1999; 55: FOR YOUR INFORMATION The reader s attention is directed to the commentary on this article and the article by Keyzer et al., which appear on the preceding pages AJR:193, November 2009

INTRALUMINAL GAS IN NON-PERFORATED ACUTE APPENDICITIS: A predictor of gangrenous appendicitis

INTRALUMINAL GAS IN NON-PERFORATED ACUTE APPENDICITIS: A predictor of gangrenous appendicitis INTRALUMINAL GAS IN NON-PERFORATED ACUTE APPENDICITIS: A predictor of gangrenous appendicitis DM Plata Ariza, MD; E Martínez Chamorro, MD; D Castaño Pardo, MD; M Arroyo López, MD; E Peghini Gavilanes,

More information

Intraluminal gas in non-perforated acute appendicitis: a CT sign of gangrenous appendicitis

Intraluminal gas in non-perforated acute appendicitis: a CT sign of gangrenous appendicitis Intraluminal gas in non-perforated acute appendicitis: a CT sign of gangrenous appendicitis Poster No.: C-978 Congress: ECR 202 Type: Scientific Exhibit Authors: D. Plata Ariza, E. MARTINEZ CHAMORRO, J.

More information

The Questionable Utility of Oral Contrast for the Patient with Abdominal Pain in the Emergency Department

The Questionable Utility of Oral Contrast for the Patient with Abdominal Pain in the Emergency Department The Questionable Utility of Oral Contrast for the Patient with Abdominal Pain in the Emergency Department Jonathan Rakofsky, MD PGY3 Henry Ford Hospital Emergency Medicine Program December 2014 All patients

More information

IV and Oral contrast vs. IV contrast alone computed tomography for the visualization of appendix and diagnosis of appendicitis in adult ED patients

IV and Oral contrast vs. IV contrast alone computed tomography for the visualization of appendix and diagnosis of appendicitis in adult ED patients IV and Oral contrast vs. IV contrast alone computed tomography for the visualization of appendix and diagnosis of appendicitis in adult ED patients Aman Wadhwani, MD/MSc-Candidate Lancia Guo, MD Erik Saude,

More information

Advances in Emergency Imaging

Advances in Emergency Imaging Hampton Symposium,, October 16 th, 2010 Advances in Emergency Imaging Robert A. Novelline, MD Professor of Radiology, Harvard Medical School Director of Emergency Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital

More information

Use of IV-contrast versus IV-and oral-contrast in the evaluation of abdominal pain on CT in the emergency department

Use of IV-contrast versus IV-and oral-contrast in the evaluation of abdominal pain on CT in the emergency department Use of IV-contrast versus IV-and oral-contrast in the evaluation of abdominal pain on CT in the emergency department Poster No.: B-0693 Congress: ECR 2016 Type: Authors: Scientific Paper M. Wasserman 1,

More information

Department of Radiology, Faculty of Medicine, Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol University, Bangkok 10700, Thailand. ABSTRACT

Department of Radiology, Faculty of Medicine, Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol University, Bangkok 10700, Thailand. ABSTRACT OriginalArticle Computed Tomographic Findings in Differentiating between Diverticulitis and Colon Cancer Aphinya Charoensak, M.D., Marayart Tongintarach, M.D., Nithida Na Songkhla, M.D. Department of Radiology,

More information

The nontraumatic acute abdomen

The nontraumatic acute abdomen CT features of acute appendicitis: pictorial review Marco ntonio Cura, MD The nontraumatic acute abdomen is one of the most common presentations to the emergency room, with appendicitis being one of the

More information

Pitfalls in the CT diagnosis of appendicitis

Pitfalls in the CT diagnosis of appendicitis The British Journal of Radiology, 77 (2004), 792 799 DOI: 10.1259/bjr/95663370 E 2004 The British Institute of Radiology Pictorial review Pitfalls in the CT diagnosis of appendicitis 1 C D LEVINE, 2 O

More information

CT staging in sigmoid diverticulitis

CT staging in sigmoid diverticulitis CT staging in sigmoid diverticulitis Poster No.: C-1503 Congress: ECR 2012 Type: Scientific Paper Authors: M. Buchberger, B. von Rahden, J. Schmid, W. Kenn, C.-T. Germer, D. Hahn; Würzburg/DE Keywords:

More information

Improvement of Image Quality with ß-Blocker Premedication on ECG-Gated 16-MDCT Coronary Angiography

Improvement of Image Quality with ß-Blocker Premedication on ECG-Gated 16-MDCT Coronary Angiography 16-MDCT Coronary Angiography Shim et al. 16-MDCT Coronary Angiography Sung Shine Shim 1 Yookyung Kim Soo Mee Lim Received December 1, 2003; accepted after revision June 1, 2004. 1 All authors: Department

More information

Investigating the Impact of the Amount of Contrast Material used in Abdominal CT Examinations Regarding the Diagnosis of Appendicolith

Investigating the Impact of the Amount of Contrast Material used in Abdominal CT Examinations Regarding the Diagnosis of Appendicolith Research Article Investigating the Impact of the Amount of Contrast Material used in Abdominal CT Examinations Regarding the Diagnosis of Appendicolith Eleftherios Lavdas 1,2, Nadia Boci 2, Lia Sarantaenna

More information

Oral Contrast for Abdominal CT: Nay (Or Let s Make CT Great Again )

Oral Contrast for Abdominal CT: Nay (Or Let s Make CT Great Again ) Oral Contrast for Abdominal CT: Nay (Or Let s Make CT Great Again ) Mark E. Baker, MD, FACR, FSAR, FSCBT/MR Professor of Radiology Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of CWRU Staff Radiologist,

More information

Computed Tomography Diagnostic Values of Acute Appendicitis in Different Patient Subgroups

Computed Tomography Diagnostic Values of Acute Appendicitis in Different Patient Subgroups J Radiol Sci 2013; 38: 9-14 Computed Tomography Diagnostic Values of Acute Appendicitis in Different Patient Subgroups Chih-Chen Chang Yon-Cheong Wong Li-Jen Wang Cheng-Hsien Wu Huan-Wu Chen Chen-Chih

More information

The Value of Urgent Barium Enema and Computed Tomography in Acute Malignant Colonic Obstruction: Is Urgent Barium Enema Still Necessary?

The Value of Urgent Barium Enema and Computed Tomography in Acute Malignant Colonic Obstruction: Is Urgent Barium Enema Still Necessary? J Radiol Sci 2012; 37: 105-110 The Value of Urgent Barium Enema and Computed Tomography in Acute Malignant Colonic Obstruction: Is Urgent Barium Enema Still Necessary? Chun-Chao Huang 1,2 Fei-Shih Yang

More information

The role of multidetector computed tomography versus digital subtraction angiography in triaging care and management in abdominopelvic trauma

The role of multidetector computed tomography versus digital subtraction angiography in triaging care and management in abdominopelvic trauma Singapore Med J 2016; 57(9): 497-502 doi: 10.11622/smedj.2015179 The role of multidetector computed tomography versus digital subtraction angiography in triaging care and management in abdominopelvic trauma

More information

Computerized Tomography of the Acute Left Upper Quadrant Pain

Computerized Tomography of the Acute Left Upper Quadrant Pain Computerized Tomography of the Acute Left Upper Quadrant Pain Authors 1. Temel Tirkes, M.D. (1,2) Associate Professor of Radiology 2. Zachary Ballenger, M.D. (1) 3. Scott D. Steenburg, M.D. (1) Associate

More information

Alvarado scores and pain onset in relation to multislice CT findings in acute appendicitis

Alvarado scores and pain onset in relation to multislice CT findings in acute appendicitis Diagn Interv Radiol 2008; 14:14-18 Turkish Society of Radiology 2008 ABDOMINAL IMAGING ORIGINAL ARTICLE Alvarado scores and pain onset in relation to multislice CT findings in acute appendicitis Erkan

More information

Value of Contrast Enhanced MDCT in Distinguishing Complicated from Non-Complicated Acute Appendicitis

Value of Contrast Enhanced MDCT in Distinguishing Complicated from Non-Complicated Acute Appendicitis Med. J. Cairo Univ., Vol. 84, No. 2, September: 91-98, 2016 www.medicaljournalofcairouniversity.net Value of Contrast Enhanced MDCT in Distinguishing Complicated from Non-Complicated Acute Appendicitis

More information

CT angiography techniques. Boot camp

CT angiography techniques. Boot camp CT angiography techniques Boot camp Overview Basic concepts Contrast administration arterial opacification Time scan acquisition during the arterial phase Protocol examples Helical non-gated CTA Pulmonary

More information

Hirschsprung Disease and Contrast Enema: Diagnostic Value of Simplified Contrast Enema and Twenty-Four-Hour-Delayed Abdominal Radiographs

Hirschsprung Disease and Contrast Enema: Diagnostic Value of Simplified Contrast Enema and Twenty-Four-Hour-Delayed Abdominal Radiographs J Radiol Sci 2011; 36: 159-164 Hirschsprung Disease and Contrast Enema: Diagnostic Value of Simplified Contrast Enema and Twenty-Four-Hour-Delayed Abdominal Radiographs Chun-Chao Huang 1,2 Shin-Lin Shih

More information

Evaluation of Blunt Abdominal Trauma Using PACS-Based 2D and 3D MDCT Reformations of the Lumbar Spine and Pelvis

Evaluation of Blunt Abdominal Trauma Using PACS-Based 2D and 3D MDCT Reformations of the Lumbar Spine and Pelvis PACS-Based MDCT Reformations of Blunt Abdominal Trauma Musculoskeletal Imaging Original Research Brian C. Lucey 1 Joshua W. Stuhlfaut Aaron R. Hochberg Jose C. Varghese Jorge A. Soto Lucey BC, Stuhlfaut

More information

Intra-Appendiceal Air at CT: Is It a Useful or a Confusing Sign for the Diagnosis of Acute Appendicitis?

Intra-Appendiceal Air at CT: Is It a Useful or a Confusing Sign for the Diagnosis of Acute Appendicitis? Original Article Gastrointestinal Imaging http://dx.doi.org/10.3348/kjr.2016.17.1.39 pissn 1229-6929 eissn 2005-8330 Korean J Radiol 2016;17(1):39-46 Intra-Appendiceal Air at CT: Is It a Useful or a Confusing

More information

Abdomen and Pelvis CT (1) By the end of the lecture students should be able to:

Abdomen and Pelvis CT (1) By the end of the lecture students should be able to: RAD 451 Abdomen and Pelvis CT (1) By the end of the lecture students should be able to: State the common indications for Abdomen and pelvis CT exams Identify possible contra indications for Abdomen and

More information

Imaging Features of Acute Pyelonephritis in Contrast Computed Tomography as Predictors of Need for Intervention

Imaging Features of Acute Pyelonephritis in Contrast Computed Tomography as Predictors of Need for Intervention Imaging Features of Acute Pyelonephritis in Contrast Computed Tomography as Predictors of Need for Intervention Poster No.: C-0088 Congress: ECR 2014 Type: Scientific Exhibit Authors: C. Y. Lee, C. W.

More information

Imaging Features of Acute Pyelonephritis in Contrast Computed Tomography as Predictors of Need for Intervention

Imaging Features of Acute Pyelonephritis in Contrast Computed Tomography as Predictors of Need for Intervention Imaging Features of Acute Pyelonephritis in Contrast Computed Tomography as Predictors of Need for Intervention Poster No.: C-0088 Congress: ECR 2014 Type: Scientific Exhibit Authors: C. Y. Lee, C. W.

More information

Intravenous contrast alone vs intravenous and oral contrast computed tomography for the diagnosis of appendicitis in adult ED patients,,

Intravenous contrast alone vs intravenous and oral contrast computed tomography for the diagnosis of appendicitis in adult ED patients,, American Journal of Emergency Medicine (2012) 30, 1765 1773 www.elsevier.com/locate/ajem Original Contribution Intravenous contrast alone vs intravenous and oral contrast computed tomography for the diagnosis

More information

Introduction of Appendiceal CT Impact on Negative Appendectomy and Appendiceal

Introduction of Appendiceal CT Impact on Negative Appendectomy and Appendiceal ANNALS OF SURGERY Vol. 229, No. 3, 344-349 1999 ULppinc Willams & Wilins, Inc. Introduction of Appendiceal CT Impact on Negative Appendectomy and Appendiceal Perforation Rates Patrick M. Rao, MD,* James

More information

ACUTE ABDOMEN IN OLDER CHILDREN. Carlos J. Sivit M.D.

ACUTE ABDOMEN IN OLDER CHILDREN. Carlos J. Sivit M.D. ACUTE ABDOMEN IN OLDER CHILDREN Carlos J. Sivit M.D. ACUTE ABDOMEN Clinical condition characterized by severe abdominal pain developing over several hours ACUTE ABDOMINAL PAIN Common childhood complaint

More information

Acute Diverticulitis of the Cecum and Ascending Colon: The Value of Thin-Section Helical CT Findings in Excluding Colonic Carcinoma

Acute Diverticulitis of the Cecum and Ascending Colon: The Value of Thin-Section Helical CT Findings in Excluding Colonic Carcinoma Hyun-Jung Jang 1 Hyo K. Lim Soon Jin Lee Won Jae Lee Eung Yeop Kim Seung Hoon Kim Received August 17, 1999; accepted after revision October 12, 1999. 1 All authors: Department of Radiology, Samsung Medical

More information

The accuracy of emergency medicine and surgical residents in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis

The accuracy of emergency medicine and surgical residents in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis American Journal of Emergency Medicine (2010) 28, 766 770 www.elsevier.com/locate/ajem Original Contribution The accuracy of emergency medicine and surgical residents in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis

More information

Ultra-low dose CT of the acute abdomen: Spectrum of imaging findings

Ultra-low dose CT of the acute abdomen: Spectrum of imaging findings Ultra-low dose CT of the acute abdomen: Spectrum of imaging findings Poster No.: C-1452 Congress: ECR 2010 Type: Educational Exhibit Topic: GI Tract Authors: P. A. Vlachou, C. Kloeters, S. Kandel, P. Hein,

More information

Abdominal Pain in Pediatric Patients Image Gently

Abdominal Pain in Pediatric Patients Image Gently Abdominal Pain in Pediatric Patients Image Gently Susan D. John, M.D. Baptist Health Emergency Radiology 2017 Disclosure I have no financial relationships with a commercial entity producing healthcarerelated

More information

Emergency MDCT in case of right lower quadrant pain

Emergency MDCT in case of right lower quadrant pain Emergency MDCT in case of right lower quadrant pain Poster No.: C-0563 Congress: ECR 2015 Type: Educational Exhibit Authors: M. Lisitskaya, V. Sinitsyn; Moscow/RU Keywords: Abdomen, Emergency, Gastrointestinal

More information

MDCT of the Elbow in Pediatric Patients with Posttraumatic Elbow Effusions

MDCT of the Elbow in Pediatric Patients with Posttraumatic Elbow Effusions Chapman et al. MDCT of the Pediatric Elbow Pediatric Imaging Original Research C M E D E N T U R I C L I M G I N G JR 2006; 187:812 817 0361 803X/06/1873 812 merican Roentgen Ray Society Y O Vernon Chapman

More information

B. CT protocols for the spine

B. CT protocols for the spine B. CT protocols for the spine Poster No.: A-003 Congress: ECR 2010 Type: Invited Speaker Topic: Neuro Authors: B. Tins; Oswestry/UK Keywords: CT, spine, diagnostic imaging protocol DOI: 10.1594/ecr2010/A-003

More information

Acute appendicitis: relationships between CT-determined severities and serum white blood cell counts and C-reactive protein levels

Acute appendicitis: relationships between CT-determined severities and serum white blood cell counts and C-reactive protein levels The British Journal of Radiology, 84 (2011), 1115 1120 Acute appendicitis: relationships between CT-determined severities and serum white blood cell counts and C-reactive protein levels 1 H C KIM, MD,

More information

Pediatric chest HRCT using the idose 4 Hybrid Iterative Reconstruction Algorithm: Which idose level to choose?

Pediatric chest HRCT using the idose 4 Hybrid Iterative Reconstruction Algorithm: Which idose level to choose? Journal of Physics: Conference Series PAPER OPEN ACCESS Pediatric chest HRCT using the idose 4 Hybrid Iterative Reconstruction Algorithm: Which idose level to choose? To cite this article: M Smarda et

More information

in Patients Without Overt Gastrointestinal Disease

in Patients Without Overt Gastrointestinal Disease Gastrointestinal Imaging Original Research Gervaise et al. Gastric Wall Fatty Infiltration Gastrointestinal Imaging Original Research Alban Gervaise 1 Pierre Naulet 1 Christelle Gervaise-Henry 2 Camille

More information

Customizing Contrast Injection for Body MDCT: Algorithmic Approach

Customizing Contrast Injection for Body MDCT: Algorithmic Approach Customizing Contrast Injection for Body MDCT: Algorithmic Approach Lincoln L. Berland, M.D., F.A.C.R. University of Alabama at Birmingham Before Contrast Prep and Hydration Hydration single most important

More information

Automatic Patient Centering for MDCT: Effect on Radiation Dose

Automatic Patient Centering for MDCT: Effect on Radiation Dose Patient Centering for MDCT CT Imaging Original Research Jianhai Li 1 Unni K. Udayasankar 1 Thomas L. Toth 2 John Seamans 2 William C. Small 1 Mannudeep K. Kalra 1,3 Li J, Udayasankar UK, Toth TL, Seamans

More information

Abdominal Vascular Emergencies in MDCT Imaging

Abdominal Vascular Emergencies in MDCT Imaging Abdominal Vascular Emergencies in MDCT Imaging Poster No.: C-0913 Congress: ECR 2016 Type: Educational Exhibit Authors: K. SHIRODKAR, D. N. Dasappa, S. L. DEVARU, D. S. 1 2 2 2 2 2 1 Nandikoor, A. R. Patil,

More information

Blunt Carotid Injury- CT Angiography is Adequate For Screening. Kelly Knudson, M.D. UCHSC April 3, 2006

Blunt Carotid Injury- CT Angiography is Adequate For Screening. Kelly Knudson, M.D. UCHSC April 3, 2006 Blunt Carotid Injury- CT Angiography is Adequate For Screening Kelly Knudson, M.D. UCHSC April 3, 2006 CT Angiography vs Digital Subtraction Angiography Blunt carotid injury screening is one of the very

More information

Primary epiploic appendagitis versus omental infarction : The role of MDCT

Primary epiploic appendagitis versus omental infarction : The role of MDCT Primary epiploic appendagitis versus omental infarction : The role of MDCT e-poster: EE-125 Congress: ESGAR 2010 Type: Educational Exhibit Topic: Diagnostic / Mesentery and Peritoneum Authors: P. Kraniotis,

More information

APPENDICITIS AND ITS APPEARANCES ON CT

APPENDICITIS AND ITS APPEARANCES ON CT APPENDICITIS AND ITS APPEARANCES ON CT APPENDICITIS Results from acute inflammation of the appendix. Most common abdominal surgical emergencies. Diagnosis usually clinical based on physical exam and lab

More information

Multidetector row helical CT and US in diagnosing appendicitis

Multidetector row helical CT and US in diagnosing appendicitis The Egyptian Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine (2011) 42, 139 145 Egyptian Society of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine The Egyptian Journal of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine www.elsevier.com/locate/ejrnm

More information

CT Findings of Sigmoid Volvulus

CT Findings of Sigmoid Volvulus Gastrointestinal Imaging Original Research Levsky et al. CT of Sigmoid Volvulus Gastrointestinal Imaging Original Research Jeffrey M. Levsky 1 Elana I. Den Ronelle A. DuBrow Ellen L. Wolf Alla M. Rozenblit

More information

CT Cystography with Multiplanar Reformation for Suspected Bladder Rupture: Experience in 234 Cases

CT Cystography with Multiplanar Reformation for Suspected Bladder Rupture: Experience in 234 Cases han et al. T ystography for Suspected ladder Rupture Genitourinary Imaging Original Research M E D E N T U R I L I M G I N G David P. N. han 1 Hani H. bujudeh 2 George L. ushing, Jr. 2 Robert. Novelline

More information

Contrast agents, Abdomen, CT, Contrast agent-intravenous, Cancer /ecr2015/C-1760

Contrast agents, Abdomen, CT, Contrast agent-intravenous, Cancer /ecr2015/C-1760 Can Weight-Adapted IV Contrast Media Protocols Reduce Iodine Dose and Still Produce a Diagnostic Contrast Enhancement Level in Abdomino-Pelvic CT Scans? Poster No.: C-1760 Congress: ECR 2015 Type: Authors:

More information

The "whirl sign". Diagnostic accuracy for intestinal volvulus.

The whirl sign. Diagnostic accuracy for intestinal volvulus. The "whirl sign". Diagnostic accuracy for intestinal volvulus. Poster No.: C-0670 Congress: ECR 2014 Type: Scientific Exhibit Authors: M. Pire, M. Marti, A. Borobia, A. Verón; Madrid/ES Keywords: Abdomen,

More information

Anterior Spinal Artery and Artery of Adamkiewicz Detected by Using Multi-Detector Row CT

Anterior Spinal Artery and Artery of Adamkiewicz Detected by Using Multi-Detector Row CT AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 24:13 17, January 2003 Anterior Spinal Artery and Artery of Adamkiewicz Detected by Using Multi-Detector Row CT Kohsuke Kudo, Satoshi Terae, Takeshi Asano, Masaki Oka, Kenshi Kaneko,

More information

128-slice dual-source CT coronary angiography using highpitch scan protocols in 102 patients

128-slice dual-source CT coronary angiography using highpitch scan protocols in 102 patients 128-slice dual-source CT coronary angiography using highpitch scan protocols in 102 patients Poster No.: C-0634 Congress: ECR 2010 Type: Scientific Exhibit Topic: Cardiac Authors: Y. H. Choe, J. W. Lee,

More information

Is Structured Reporting More Accurate Than Conventional Reporting in CT Reporting of the Abdomen and Pelvis?

Is Structured Reporting More Accurate Than Conventional Reporting in CT Reporting of the Abdomen and Pelvis? Is Structured Reporting More Accurate Than Conventional Reporting in CT Reporting of the Abdomen and Pelvis? A M Almuslim, MBBS; J G Ryan, MD; A Murtaza, MD Purpose The purpose of this research is to determine

More information

Case Report Thoracic Imaging. Eun Kyung Khil, MD 1, Heon Lee, MD, PhD 1, Keun Her, MD 2 INTRODUCTION CASE REPORT

Case Report Thoracic Imaging. Eun Kyung Khil, MD 1, Heon Lee, MD, PhD 1, Keun Her, MD 2 INTRODUCTION CASE REPORT Case Report Thoracic Imaging http://dx.doi.org/10.3348/kjr.2014.15.1.173 pissn 1229-6929 eissn 2005-8330 Korean J Radiol 2014;15(1):173-177 Spontaneous Intramural Full-Length Dissection of Esophagus Treated

More information

Observer variation for radiography, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging of occult hip fractures

Observer variation for radiography, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging of occult hip fractures Observer variation for radiography, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging of occult hip fractures Collin, David; Dunker, Dennis; Gothlin, Jan H.; Geijer, Mats Published in: Acta Radiologica

More information

Original Report. Stercoral Colitis Leading to Fatal Peritonitis: CT Findings. Gastrointestinal Imaging Heffernan et al. CT of Stercoral Colitis

Original Report. Stercoral Colitis Leading to Fatal Peritonitis: CT Findings. Gastrointestinal Imaging Heffernan et al. CT of Stercoral Colitis Gastrointestinal Imaging Heffernan et al. CT of Stercoral Colitis Cathleen Heffernan 1 H. Leon Pachter 2 lec J. Megibow 1 Michael Macari 1 Hefferman C, Pachter HL, Megibow J, Macari M Received pril 21,

More information

Multi-detector CT findings in patients with mesenteric ischaemia following cardiopulmonary bypass surgery

Multi-detector CT findings in patients with mesenteric ischaemia following cardiopulmonary bypass surgery Multi-detector CT findings in patients with mesenteric ischaemia following cardiopulmonary bypass surgery Poster No.: C-2340 Congress: ECR 2012 Type: Scientific Exhibit Authors: T. Barrett, S. Upponi,

More information

CLINICAL PRESENTATION AND RADIOLOGY QUIZ QUESTION

CLINICAL PRESENTATION AND RADIOLOGY QUIZ QUESTION Donald L. Renfrew, MD Radiology Associates of the Fox Valley, 333 N. Commercial Street, Suite 100, Neenah, WI 54956 09/17/2011 Radiology Quiz of the Week # 38 Page 1 CLINICAL PRESENTATION AND RADIOLOGY

More information

Medical application of transabdominal ultrasound in gastrointestinal diseases

Medical application of transabdominal ultrasound in gastrointestinal diseases Medical application of transabdominal ultrasound in gastrointestinal diseases Hsiu-Po Wang Department of Emergency Medicine National Taiwan University Hospital Real-time ultrasound has become a standard

More information

UNDERSTANDING X-RAYS: ABDOMINAL IMAGING THE ABDOMEN

UNDERSTANDING X-RAYS: ABDOMINAL IMAGING THE ABDOMEN UNDERSTANDING X-RAYS: ABDOMINAL IMAGING THE ABDOMEN Radiology Enterprises radiologyenterprises@gmail.com www.radiologyenterprises.com STOMACH AND SMALL BOWEL STOMACH AND SMALL BOWEL Swallowed air is a

More information

Cecal Volvulus: Case Presentation and Review of CT Findings

Cecal Volvulus: Case Presentation and Review of CT Findings August 2011 Cecal Volvulus: Case Presentation and Review of CT Findings Omar Pardesi, Harvard Medical School Year III Our Patient LD: History & Physical HPI: 28 y.o. female presents with diffuse abdominal

More information

Società Medico Chirurgica di Ferrara 12 maggio Malattia diverticolare del colon. La TC in faseacuta

Società Medico Chirurgica di Ferrara 12 maggio Malattia diverticolare del colon. La TC in faseacuta Società Medico Chirurgica di Ferrara 12 maggio 2012 La TC in faseacuta Pier Marco Cervi U.O. Radiodiagnostica Ospedaliera Direttore Dott. Stefano Bighi Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria S. Anna di Ferrara

More information

Imaging of Biliary Tract Emergencies in Jorge A. Soto, MD Professor of Radiology Boston University Medical Center.

Imaging of Biliary Tract Emergencies in Jorge A. Soto, MD Professor of Radiology Boston University Medical Center. Imaging of Biliary Tract Emergencies in 2011 Jorge A. Soto, MD Professor of Radiology Boston University Medical Center Introduction Biliary emergencies are: Common Come in many flavors Deceiving: frequent

More information

Modifi ed CT perfusion contrast injection protocols for improved CBF quantifi cation with lower temporal sampling

Modifi ed CT perfusion contrast injection protocols for improved CBF quantifi cation with lower temporal sampling Investigations and research Modifi ed CT perfusion contrast injection protocols for improved CBF quantifi cation with lower temporal sampling J. Wang Z. Ying V. Yao L. Ciancibello S. Premraj S. Pohlman

More information

Posterior Rectus Sheath Hernia Causing Intermittent Small Bowel Obstruction

Posterior Rectus Sheath Hernia Causing Intermittent Small Bowel Obstruction Posterior Rectus Sheath Hernia Causing Intermittent Small Bowel Obstruction Scott Lenobel 1*, Robert Lenobel 2, Joseph Yu 1 1. Department of Radiology, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center,

More information

UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository)

UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) Inter-observer agreement for abdominal CT in unselected patients with acute abdominal pain van Randen, A.; Laméris, W.; Nio, C.Y.; Spijkerboer, A.M.; Meier, M.A.;

More information

Traumatic and Non Traumatic Adrenal Emergencies

Traumatic and Non Traumatic Adrenal Emergencies Traumatic and Non Traumatic Adrenal Emergencies Michael N. Patlas, MD, FRCPC (1), Christine O. Menias, MD (2), Douglas S. Katz, MD, FACR (3), Ania Z. Kielar, MD, FRCPC (4), Alla M. Rozenblit, MD (5), Jorge

More information

Gemstone Spectral Imaging quantifies lesion characteristics for a confident diagnosis

Gemstone Spectral Imaging quantifies lesion characteristics for a confident diagnosis GE Healthcare Gemstone Spectral Imaging quantifies lesion characteristics for a confident diagnosis CT clinical case study lesion characterization Desiree Morgan, MD Vice Chair of Clinical Research Professor

More information

Clearing the mind before the "caliber change": Diagnostic algorithm for small bowel obstruction.

Clearing the mind before the caliber change: Diagnostic algorithm for small bowel obstruction. Clearing the mind before the "caliber change": Diagnostic algorithm for small bowel obstruction. Poster No.: C-0255 Congress: ECR 2014 Type: Educational Exhibit Authors: C. Santos Montón, D. Oquillas Izquierdo,

More information

Radiology of the abdomen Lecture -1-

Radiology of the abdomen Lecture -1- Radiology of the abdomen Lecture -1- Objectives To know radiology modalities used in abdomen imaging mainly GI tract. To know advantages and disadvantages of each modality. To know indications and contraindications

More information

Radiation Exposure in Pregnancy. John R. Mayo UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA

Radiation Exposure in Pregnancy. John R. Mayo UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Radiation Exposure in Pregnancy John R. Mayo UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Illustrative Clinical Scenario 32 year old female 34 weeks pregnant with recent onset shortness of breath and central chest pain

More information

Missed Pulmonary Embolism on Abdominal CT

Missed Pulmonary Embolism on Abdominal CT Cardiopulmonary Imaging Original Research Lim et al. Pulmonary Emboli Missed on CT of the Abdomen Cardiopulmonary Imaging Original Research Kun Young Lim 1 Seth J. Kligerman 2 Cheng Ting Lin 2 Charles

More information

CT Versus MR for the Runoff

CT Versus MR for the Runoff CT Versus MR for the Runoff Robert R. Edelman, M.D. Dept. of Radiology NorthShore University HealthSystem Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University Magnetic Resonance Computed Tomography Radio

More information

Introduction ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Steve Y. Lee. Bret Coughlin. Jeannette M. Wolfe. Joseph Polino. Fidela S. Blank. Howard A.

Introduction ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Steve Y. Lee. Bret Coughlin. Jeannette M. Wolfe. Joseph Polino. Fidela S. Blank. Howard A. Emerg Radiol (2006) 12: 150 157 DOI 10.1007/s10140-006-0474-z ORIGINAL ARTICLE Steve Y. Lee. Bret Coughlin. Jeannette M. Wolfe. Joseph Polino. Fidela S. Blank. Howard A. Smithline Prospective comparison

More information

Evaluating the CT Diagnosis of Clostridium difficile Colitis: Should CT Guide Therapy?

Evaluating the CT Diagnosis of Clostridium difficile Colitis: Should CT Guide Therapy? Iain D. C. Kirkpatrick 1 Howard M. Greenberg Received April 7, 2000; accepted after revision August 24, 2000. 1 Both authors: Department of Radiology, University of Manitoba, Health Sciences Centre, 820

More information

elical CT plays an important role

elical CT plays an important role bdominal Imaging Yu et al. Helical CT of cute RLQ Pain Pictorial Essay Jinxing Yu 1 nn S. Fulcher Mary nn Turner Robert. Halvorsen Yu J, Fulcher S, Turner M, Halvorsen R Helical CT Evaluation of cute Right

More information

Evaluation of Wedging of Lower Thoracic and Upper Lumbar Vertebral Bodies in the Pediatric Population

Evaluation of Wedging of Lower Thoracic and Upper Lumbar Vertebral Bodies in the Pediatric Population Pediatric Imaging Original Research Gaca et al. Evaluation of Wedging of Lumbar Vertebral Bodies in Children Pediatric Imaging Original Research Ana Maria Gaca 1 Huiman X. Barnhart 2 George S. Bisset,

More information

Summary and conclusions

Summary and conclusions Summary and conclusions 7 Chapter 7 68 Summary and conclusions Chapter 1 provides a general introduction to this thesis focused on the use of ultrasound (US) in children with abdominal problems. The literature

More information

Emergency radiology of the large-bowel: What radiologists should know

Emergency radiology of the large-bowel: What radiologists should know Emergency radiology of the large-bowel: What radiologists should know Poster No.: C-1659 Congress: ECR 2016 Type: Educational Exhibit Authors: A. Falkowski, D. Boll; Basle/CH Keywords: Colon, Emergency,

More information

Ultrasound. Computed tomography. Case studies. Utility of IQon Spectral CT in. cardiac imaging

Ultrasound. Computed tomography. Case studies. Utility of IQon Spectral CT in. cardiac imaging Ultrasound Computed tomography Case studies Utility of IQon Spectral CT in cardiac imaging Cardiac imaging is a challenging procedure where it is necessary to image a motion-free heart. This requires a

More information

Gastrointestinal Imaging Original Research

Gastrointestinal Imaging Original Research Gastrointestinal Imaging Original Research MDCT Enterography in Crohn s Disease Gastrointestinal Imaging Original Research FOCUS ON: Brian C. Allen 1 Mark E. Baker 1 David M. Einstein 1 Erick M. Remer

More information

Computed Tomography (CT) Findings of a Diagnostic Dilemma: Atypically Located Acute Appendicitis

Computed Tomography (CT) Findings of a Diagnostic Dilemma: Atypically Located Acute Appendicitis Signature: Pol J Radiol, 2016; 81: 583-588 DOI: 10.12659/PJR.898880 CASE REPORT Received: 2016.04.04 Accepted: 2016.05.06 Published: 2016.12.04 Authors Contribution: A Study Design B Data Collection C

More information

Vascular CT Protocols

Vascular CT Protocols Vascular CT Protocols V 1D: Chest and abdominal CT angiogram (aortic dissection protocol) V 1T: Chest CT angiogram (aortic trauma protocol) V 2: Abdominal and pelvis CT angiogram (aortic aneurysm protocol)

More information

The role of abdominal X-rays in the investigation of suspected acute appendicitis

The role of abdominal X-rays in the investigation of suspected acute appendicitis Journal of Medicine and Medical Sciences Vol. 2(11) pp. 1216-1220, November 2011 Available online@ http://www.interesjournals.org/jmms Copyright 2011 International Research Journals Full Length Research

More information

Relationship Between Small Bowel Obstruction and Small Bowel Feces Sign: Four Cases Report

Relationship Between Small Bowel Obstruction and Small Bowel Feces Sign: Four Cases Report Case Report Elmer Press Relationship Between Small Bowel Obstruction and Small Bowel Feces Sign: Four Cases Report Altintoprak Fatih a, e, Gunduz Yasemin b, Yalkin Omer c, Gundugdu Kemal c, Serbulent Gokhan

More information

Role of the Radiologist

Role of the Radiologist Diagnosis and Treatment of Blunt Cerebrovascular Injuries NORDTER Consensus Conference October 22-24, 2007 Clint W. Sliker, M.D. University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center

More information

The equivocal appendix at CT: prevalence in a control population

The equivocal appendix at CT: prevalence in a control population Emerg Radiol (2010) 17:57 61 DOI 10.1007/s10140-009-0826-6 ORIGINAL ARTICLE The equivocal appendix at CT: prevalence in a control population Emily M. Webb & Zhen J. Wang & Fergus V. Coakley & Liina Poder

More information

CT imaging findings of acute mesenteric ischemia and ischemic colitis. A brief pictorial essay.

CT imaging findings of acute mesenteric ischemia and ischemic colitis. A brief pictorial essay. CT imaging findings of acute mesenteric ischemia and ischemic colitis. A brief pictorial essay. Poster No.: C-0750 Congress: ECR 2011 Type: Educational Exhibit Authors: Y. Arias Morales, J. P. Giraldo

More information

CT evaluation of small bowel carcinoid tumors

CT evaluation of small bowel carcinoid tumors CT evaluation of small bowel carcinoid tumors Poster No.: C-0060 Congress: ECR 2015 Type: Educational Exhibit Authors: N. V. V. P. Costa, L. Nascimento, T. Bilhim ; Estoril/PT, PT, 1 2 3 1 2 3 Lisbon/PT

More information

Feasibility of contrast agent volume reduction on 640-slice CT coronary angiography in patients with low heart rate

Feasibility of contrast agent volume reduction on 640-slice CT coronary angiography in patients with low heart rate Feasibility of contrast agent volume reduction on 640-slice CT coronary angiography in patients with low heart rate Poster No.: B-0742 Congress: ECR 2013 Type: Authors: Keywords: DOI: Scientific Paper

More information

Comparison of multidetector-row computed tomography findings of IgG4-related sclerosing cholangitis and cholangiocarcinoma

Comparison of multidetector-row computed tomography findings of IgG4-related sclerosing cholangitis and cholangiocarcinoma Comparison of multidetector-row computed tomography findings of IgG4-related sclerosing cholangitis and cholangiocarcinoma Poster No.: C-0245 Congress: ECR 2014 Type: Scientific Exhibit Authors: M. Yata,

More information

Fundamentals, Techniques, Pitfalls, and Limitations of MDCT Interpretation and Measurement

Fundamentals, Techniques, Pitfalls, and Limitations of MDCT Interpretation and Measurement Fundamentals, Techniques, Pitfalls, and Limitations of MDCT Interpretation and Measurement 3 rd Annual Imaging & Physiology Summit November 20-21, 21, 2009 Seoul, Korea Wm. Guy Weigold, MD, FACC Cardiovascular

More information

A case of cecal volvulus in a cerebral palsy patient: Usefulness of multidetector computed tomography for preoperative diagnosis

A case of cecal volvulus in a cerebral palsy patient: Usefulness of multidetector computed tomography for preoperative diagnosis Kawasaki Medical Journal 38(4):205-209,2012 205 A case of cecal volvulus in a cerebral palsy patient: Usefulness of multidetector computed tomography for preoperative diagnosis Yusuke MATSUI 1), Munenori

More information

Outcomes in the NLST. Health system infrastructure needs to implement screening

Outcomes in the NLST. Health system infrastructure needs to implement screening Outcomes in the NLST Health system infrastructure needs to implement screening Denise R. Aberle, MD Professor of Radiology and Bioengineering David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA 1 Disclosures I have

More information

A Randomized Controlled Study to Compare Image Quality between Fenestrated and Non-Fenestrated Intravenous Catheters for Cardiac MDCT

A Randomized Controlled Study to Compare Image Quality between Fenestrated and Non-Fenestrated Intravenous Catheters for Cardiac MDCT A Randomized Controlled Study to Compare Image Quality between Fenestrated and Non-Fenestrated Intravenous Catheters for Cardiac MDCT Poster No.: C-0623 Congress: ECR 2017 Type: Authors: Keywords: DOI:

More information

CT Appearance of Acute Appendagitis

CT Appearance of Acute Appendagitis CT Appearance of Acute Appendagitis Poster No.: C-0673 Congress: ECR 2013 Type: Scientific Exhibit Authors: J. SAAD, F. Marrakchi, Y. M. Abdou ; Monastir, TN/TN, 1 2 2 3 1 3 Monastir/TN, Nejran, Nejran/SA

More information

A new method for radiation dose reduction at cardiac CT with multi-phase data-averaging and non-rigid image registration: preliminary clinical trial

A new method for radiation dose reduction at cardiac CT with multi-phase data-averaging and non-rigid image registration: preliminary clinical trial A new method for radiation dose reduction at cardiac CT with multi-phase data-averaging and non-rigid image registration: preliminary clinical trial Poster No.: C-0595 Congress: ECR 2013 Type: Authors:

More information

Pulmonary Nodules: Contrast- Enhanced Volumetric Variation at Different CT Scan Delays

Pulmonary Nodules: Contrast- Enhanced Volumetric Variation at Different CT Scan Delays Cardiopulmonary Imaging Original Research Rampinelli et al. Contrast-Enhanced CT of Pulmonary Nodules Cardiopulmonary Imaging Original Research Cristiano Rampinelli 1 Sara Raimondi 2 Mauro Padrenostro

More information