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Esophagectomy for carcinoma in the octogenarian
Authors:DJ Adam  SR Craig  CT Sang  EW Cameron  WS Walker
Affiliation:Diagnostic Radiology Department, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Abstract:To correlate the findings on MRI with histopathology of metastatic melanoma, MRI was performed on 29 patients with 36 lesions, using spin-echo and inversion recovery sequences. Histopathologic examination of lesions was performed within 4 weeks of imaging. Lesions were categorized according to cell type and were also evaluated for the presence and extent of melanin, iron, and necrosis. These data were then correlated with the signal intensities of the lesions. Enhancement of lesions after injection of intravenous gadolinium was calculated and correlated to vascularity of the tumor. Melanin was present more frequently in lesions appearing hyperintense or with mixed signal intensity (12/15) than in those appearing hypo- or isointense (6/21) on the T1-weighted sequence. This trend was significant (P = .013). Also, more lesions appearing mixed, ie, having both hypo- and hyperintense components, contained melanin (15/23), as opposed to lesions that appeared to be only hyperintense (3/13) on the STIR sequence. There was no clear association between signal intensity and melanin content on the T2-weighted sequence. There was no significant association between the signal intensities on the MR images and the iron content, tumor size, or tumor cell type of these lesions. There was no clear association between enhancement after gadolinium injection and vascularity, as assessed by histology. The authors concluded in this study that T1 shortening and hypointensity on the STIR sequence seen in patients with metastatic melanoma are most closely related to the melanin content of the tumor.
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