Esophagus
Lobulated mass in vallecula
squamous cell carcinoma until proven otherwise
causes of tracheal penetration include radiation, neuromuscular d/o (CVA, ALS, MS), and prior surgery
causes of aspiration include diverticulum with stasis, tumor, paresis, and esophageal reflux or obstruction
Esophagitis
Barrett’s - this is columnar metaplasia of the esophageal epithelium
occurs in 10% of pts with reflux
major risk factor for esophageal adenocarcinoma
pts with hiatal hernia or scleroderma are predisposed
nodularity (only in distal esophagus), ulceration, focal stricture and a reticular mucosal pattern
stricture can occur anywhere, but a proximal or mid stricture is especially suggestive
candida - immunocomp/AIDS or pts with stasis from achalasia or scleroderma
mucosal nodules in longitudinal columns, and later, diffuse nodularity and plaques giving the “shaggy” esophagus appearance
DDx includes herpes esophagitis, glycogenic acanthosis, acanthosis nigricans
superficial spreading squamous ca
DDx Giant ulcer
most likely causative agents are CMV and HIV
ulcers occur on a normal background esophagus
without a history of immunosuppression, should also consider medication induced ulcer
DDx varicoid filling defect
varices
varicoid carcinoma
lymphoma
Large intraluminal esophageal tumor
Long smooth strx mid to distal esophagus
Inflammatory esophagogastric polyp/fold
elongated filling defect at GE jxn
if smooth & club shaped, you don’t need endoscopy, but if lobulated, cannot differentiate from adenomatous polyp or adenoca
Paraesophageal hernia
GE jxn is below the diaphragm, but part of the gastric fundus extends above the diaphragm thru the esophageal hiatus or a diaphragmatic defect, to the left of the esophagus
CXR - posterior mediastinal mass, which cannot be distinguished from a hiatal hernia
UGI - portion of the fundus above the diaphragm, next to the esophagus
Stomach
DDx gastric fold thickening
gastritis (hypertrophic, alcoholic, infectious (H pylori), and eosinophilic)
Menetrier’s
Zollinger-Ellison
sarcoid
amyloid
Crohn’s
lymphoma (usually more irregular)
mets and adenoca possible (but less likely)
Gastric ulcer
location - benign favors the antrum, 75% along lesser curve
folds - all the way up to the edge of a benign ulcer, but are truncated in a malignant one
also, folds are normal or uniformly swollen in benign, but are amputated, fused or clubbed in malignant
benign ulcers project beyond the expected confines of the gastric wall, malignant do not
benign ulcer is centrally located on its mound, malignant are eccentric
shape - benign are round or linear, malignant are irregular
collar - well defined in benign, shaggy/irregular in malignant
benign have an associated duodenal ulcer in 50%
carmen meniscus sign signifies a malignant ulcer along the lesser curve, seen on a single contrast compression view
benign are more often multiple than malignant ones, but still usually solitary
Gastric erosions/apthous ulcers (PIC)
shallow defects in the mucosal layer of the stomach that do not penetrate beyond the muscularis mucosa
barium collects in the shallow defect, and there is usually a halo of edema
peptic - NSAIDS, alcohol, severe burns, steroids, stress
infectious - CMV, herpes and candida
Crohn’s - apthoid ulcers
Linitis plastica
DDx of solitary gastric masses
<2cm
leiomyoma
lipoma
neurofibroma
hemangioma
hyperplastic polyp
ectopic pancreas
adenomas
metastasis
eosinophilic granuloma
carcinoid
>2cm
adenoma
leiomyoma/leiomyosarcoma
metastasis
duplication cyst
gastric carcinoma
GIST
benign=leiomyoma and malignant=leiomyosarcoma
arise from smooth muscle of the gastric wall and grow as submucosal, subserosal or exophytic tumors
often reach a large size before presenting due to ulceration and GI bleed
difficult both radiologically and pathologically to distinguish leoimyoma from leiomyosarcoma
DDx: adenoca, mets and lymphoma
Gastric perforation
DDx gastrocolic fistula
Gastric Bypass
Diagram of gastric bypass anatomy shows a small gastric pouch (GP) created with stapling (dotted line) of the stomach; anastomosis of the pouch to a Roux-en-Y limb (straight thick black arrows); route of gastric contents to the efferent loop (white arrows); oversewn jejunal loop (curved arrow), or blind loop, of the Roux-en-Y limb; and jejunojejunal anastomosis (thin black arrows).
Small Bowel
Lobulated mass mildly expanding 2nd part of duodenum
DDx: adenomas (have malignant potential), prolapsing gastric mucosa (bulb only), brunner’s gland adenoma, ectopic pancreatic rest (often with central dimple as in stomach), gastric polyp extending into bulb, leiomyoma, met, lymphoma, adenoca, and flexural pseudotumor
the more distal a lesion is in the duodenum, the more likely it is to be an adenoma
Duodenal hematoma
Crohn’s disease
TI fistula - strongly suggestive of Crohn’s, but can also be seen in TB, malignancy and post surgery or radiation
string sign on SBFT or CT
skip lesions on a SBFT
psoas abscess
DDx TI involvement:
Crohn’s
infection (TB, Yersinia)
neoplasm (lymphoma, mets, carcinoid)
extrinsic causes such as abscess from appendicitis or tumor
DDx kinking and angulation of SB loops
TB
carcinoid
mets
radiation - acutely causes fold and wall thickening or fold effacement, chronically causes rigidity, fibrosis, tethering
DDx regular fold thickening in jejunum (HERE)
defined as >3mm
intramural hemorrhage
anticoagulation
hemophilia
Henoch Schonlein Purpura
ITP
trauma
vasculitis
edema - hypoproteinemia, CHF, ischemia, or lymphangiectasia
radiation
eosinophilic enteritis (can be regular or irregular)
abetalipoproteinemia (also could be regular or nodular)
DDx diffuse nodular SB fold thickening (WE CLAIM)
Celiac Disease
Scleroderma involving small bowel
collagen deposition in the bowel wall
“Hidebound bowel” which is dilated bowel, but despite being dilated, the folds are close together, with more than 5 folds per inch
sacculations on the anitmesenteric border (DDx Crohn’s) (true small bowel diverticlui which are on the mesenteric side)
dilated, atonic duodenum proximal to the aorticomesenteric angle
pseudoobstruction
pneumatosis
DDx mesenteric edema and SB thickening, hypodense mesenteric nodes
mycobacterial infection
TB - distal small bowel and ascending colon involvement, and usually produces stricturing, fistulas, angulation, kinking, linear and other ulcers
MAI - usually causes regular fold thickening similar to Whipple’s
Both TB and MAI cause low density mesenteric or retroperitoneal nodes on CT
Kaposi’s sarcoma can also produce adenopathy, which may be hypodense
metastatic disease from a mucinous adenocarcinoma or seminoma
lymphoma can cause the findings of wall thickening, edema and adenopathy, although the nodes are not typically hypdense, but may rarely be so when treated
Whipple’s - nodular fold thickening in the duodenum and proximal jejunum
SMA thrombosis
bowel wall thickening, which may be homogeneous or targetoid with separate visualization of the layers of the bowel wall
intramural gas/pneumatosis is seen in 30%, but is not specific for infarction
gas is seen in mesenteric veins and portal veins in about 13%
infarcted segment acts like an obstruction, and the bowel proximal to it is dilated and filled with gas and fluid
can be some ascites
Meckel’s diverticulum
persistence of the omphalomesenteric duct
antimesenteric border, within 100cm of the IC valve
less than half have ectopic gastric mucosa, and these can be functional and cause bleeding
complications - obstruction from intussusception, diverticulitis (may mimic appendicitis), enterolith, perforation and neoplastic transformation
Cecum and TI narrowing
Crohn’s
TB
adjacent inflammatory processes such as appendicitis and diverticulitis
neoplasms such as adenoca, mets and lymphoma
Colon
Toxic Megacolon
marked dilation and thickening of the transverse colon, with a nodular haustral pattern
can resemble pseuodpolyps
transverse colon is the most dilated (most nondependent area)
usually the result of fulminant IBD
can also be related to ischemia
perforation is pretty common and is the most dreaded complication
look for subtle free air on the supine XR of the abdomen
Lymphoid hyperplasia
small nodules, approxiately 3mm in diameter, and are mostly found in the ileocecal region and rectum
often have a small central dimple filled with barium
in children, normal finding
in adults, it may be related to an adjacent infectious or inflammatory process and has been seen in pts with infections such as giardiasis, IBD, and hypogammaglobulinemia
Ischemic colitis of IMA territory
descending and distal TRV
most common area to experience ischemia, especially around the splenic flexure (watershed area)
more often related to hypoperfusion from a low flow state than it is to thrombus/embolus
most episodes occur in the elderly, and resolve without sequella
infection and perforation can result
mucosa and submucosa are most suceptible
Findings:
marked segmental wall thickening resulting in thumbprinting
ulceration of the mucosal surface
pneumatosis intestinalis may also be seen, and portal venous gas in severe cases
healed ischemia can produce a stricture or fibrosis with loss of haustra
Cecal volvulus
2nd most common type of colonic volvulus; sigmoid is most common
can only occur if the right side of the colon is incompletely fused to the retroiperitoneum(hypermobile cecum)
KUB - single large dilated loop (which by its size must be colon), which usually lies upward and to the left
rest of the colon is not dilated
small bowel usually is dilated
BE shows a bird’s beak at the site of obstruction
2 types of cecal volvulus, axial torsion and bascule
DDx ascending colon wall thickening
typhlitis - most commonly involves cecum and ascending coon, but can involve TI
colon cancer - can have multiple appearances, one of them is wall thickening
lymphoma - what can’t it look like?
metastasis
ischemia - not the most common pattern to just involve ascending colon, but it could
Crohn’s - would be odd not to have any other findings
infection such as ambiasis, which favors the proximal colon, TB, actinomycosis
appendicitis can cause ascending colon wall thickening d/t proximity
Apthoid ulcers
in the colon or small bowel, apthous ulcers can be due to Crohn’s (most common), or infections, such as viral, Amebiasis, salmonellosis or ischemia and less likely Behcet’s
bull’s eye appearance like apthous ulcers elsewhere in the GI tract
small bowel stricture that makes Crohn’s even more likely, although some infections could produce that too
Appendicitis
KUB - appendicolith is seen in about 10%
other findings include SBO or ileus, obscuration of psoas or obturator margins, abscess seen as mass with displacement of bowel loops, +/-mottled gas in it
BE - if the entire appendix fills, that rules out appendicitis
nonfilling of the appendix occurs in about 20% of nl BEs
visualization of an abscess filling with contrast next to the appendix is rare, but helpful
nonfilling of the appendix and a mass/mass effect in the lower abdomen/pelvis
CT - dilated/thickened appendix, with diameter > 6mm, increased appendiceal wall enhancement, stranding in the periaapendiceal fat, appendicolith, and abscess or phlegmon
Cobblestoning in colon
typical for Crohn’s
pseudopolypoid islands of thickened mucosa and submucosa in between areas of deep linear ulcers and transverse fissures
UC can produce a somewhat similar appearance (but not called cobblestone) due to pseudopolyps on a background of ulceration
if involves the entire colon, I would probably favor UC over Crohn’s, though Crohn’s could involve the entire colon too
DDx: pancolitis from ischemia or infection
Villous adenoma
tubular, tubulovillous or villous, with villous having the highest malignant potential
villous ones are almost always sessile and more lobulated than tubular adenomas
frondlike or carpet lesions are almost always villous
50% of all adenomas occur in the rectosigmoid area
majority of colon cancers arise from adenomatous polyps
radiographic feautres suggestive of malignancy include an irregular, lobulated surface, broad base>height, retraction of colon wall, and interval growth
classic radiologic findings of polyps
bowler’s hat results when a polyp forms acute angles with the bowel wall, and therefore traps barium around it’s base, forming a white ring, and the barum on the surface (dome) of the polyp forms a curvilinear denisty
mexican hat sign is when you see a polyp with a stalk end on through the head of the polyp, so that the stalk forms a white ring inside the other white ring which is barium on the head of the polyp
Sessile colonic polyp
sessile polyp = a polyp without a stalk, vs pedunculated which has a stalk
sessile have a higher risk of malignancy than pedunculated
Colon CA staging
A=limited to mucosa
B1=extension into but not thru muscularis propria
B2=thru muscularis propria, into serosa or mesenteric fat, no nodes
C1=into, not thru, muscularis propria with nodes
C2=thru muscularis propria with nodes
D=distant mets
Rectal CA staging
Tumor categories
Tx:No description of the tumor's extent is possible because of incomplete information.
Tis: In situ carcinoma; the tumor involves only the muscularis mucosa
T1: The cancer has grown through the muscularis mucosa and extends into the submucosa
T2:The cancer has grown through the submucosa and extends into the muscularis propria
T3: The cancer has grown through the muscularis propria and into the outermost layers of the colon but not through them; it has not reached any nearby organs or tissues
T4a: The cancer has grown through the serosa (visceral peritoneum)
T4b: The cancer has grown through the wall of the colon and is attached to or invades nearby tissues or organs
Node categories
Nx:No description of lymph node involvement is possible because of incomplete information
N0:No cancer in nearby lymph nodes
N1a:Cancer cells found in 1 nearby lymph node
N1b:Cancer cells found in 2 to 3 nearby lymph nodes
N1c:Small deposits of cancer cells found in areas of fat near lymph nodes, but not in the lymph nodes themselves.
N2a:Cancer cells found in 4 to 6 nearby lymph nodes
N2b: Cancer cells found in 7 or more nearby lymph nodes
Metastasis categories
M0:No distant spread seen
M1a: The cancer has spread to 1 distant organ or set of distant lymph nodes
M1b:The cancer has spread to more than 1 distant organ or set of distant lymph nodes, or has spread to distant parts of the peritoneum
a) Axial T2-weighted FSE (TSE) sequence of the pelvis depicting the layers of the rectal wall. The mucosa and submucosa can be visualized as a relatively hyperintense band (arrows). The hypointense line (arrowheads) represents the muscularis propria.
b) Axial T2-weighted FSE (TSE) sequence. The mesorectal fascia can be visualized as a thin line (arrowheads), enveloping the mesorectal compartment, containing the rectum, mesorectal fat, blood vessels, lymphatic vessels and nodes
a Paraxial T2-weighted FSE (TSE) sequence. T1/2 rectal cancer. The relatively hyperintense intraluminal tumor (arrowhead) is confined to the rectal wall. Tumor invasion of the mesorectum is not visible.
b Paraxial 3D-MPR and
c intraluminal (virtual endoscopy) CT reconstuctions after rectal insufflation of CO2 showing the same tumor as a
filiform polyps are also called postinflammatory polyps
result of healing aorund a pseudopolyp, which leaves a projection of normal mucosa, which is usually comma shaped
can be seen on a background of normal mucosa or of recurrent disease.
most often from UC, but can also be seen in Crohn’s or other inflammatory conditions of the colon
C Dif (pseudomembranous) colitis
should not do a BE in a pt if you suspect C. dif clinically or b/c of KUB findings of marked bowel wall thickening, nodularity, and thumbprinting (risk of perforation)
BE - shaggy, irregular colonic contour due to pseudomemebranes with barium filling the clefts b/w them
DDx - ischemia and UC
CT - classic appearance is the accordion sign, which is intraluminal contrast interposed b/w markedly thickened haustra
marked bowel wall thickening (averages 15mm) involving the entire colon (which makes ischemia less likely)
low attenuation in the bowel wall and inflammatory stranding in the surrounding fat
Lead pipe colon
colon which is short, narrow, tubular, and lacks haustrations
usually a result of chronic UC, which causes hypertrophy and fixed contraction of the muscularis mucosa
DDx - cathartic colon
Gardner’s syndrome
autosomal dominant
causes multiple adenomatous polyps (very high risk of colon cancer → 100%)
all have polyps in colon, and 90% have some in duodenum, with 10% having them in the stomach
extra-intestinal findings of sinus osteomas, epidermoid cysts and abdominal desmoids
desmoids are soft tissue density masses which often have spiculated margins
treatment is prophylactic colectomy at around age 20 to prevent colon cancer
Virtual Colonoscopy
Technique
Insufflation
• CO2 improves distention and decreases discomfort (rapid reabsorption)
• Automated improves distention
• Start @ 15mm Hg & gradually increase to 20-25mm Hg
• Higher (25mm Hg) needed for larger pts
Tagging
• Fecal - barium
• 3 oz morning
• 3 oz noon
• 3 oz evening
• Fluid - iodine
• ? dose
Positioning
• R lat decub
• Prone (optional)
• L lat decub (optional)
• Supine
• Scan 2 positions (usually supine & prone)
• If failed colonoscopy, do lat decubitus view
• Finish by deflating balloon, removing catheter, and scanning lower 10cm
Scanning
• Detector collomation: 0.6-0.75mm
• Slice thickness: 1.0-1.25mm
• Recon interval: 0.8-1.0mm
• Total dose: 5-6.5 mSv
Interpretation
• Windows - 2000/0
• 2D - Use all 3 recon views
• Use 3D for troubleshooting
• Tagging often sticks to outside of polyps
Cancer risk
• <= 5mm - 0.08%
• 6-9mm - 0.7% (consider 3 yr f/u)
• >= 10mm - 15.7%
Liver
Cirrhosis
earliest phases of liver injury - the liver becomes fatty and enlarged
later stages - the liver is small and nodular
regenerating nodules may be present, and these are isodense precontrast and hypodense post contrast
contrast enhancement is inhomogeneous and diminished vs nl
porta hepatis and intrahepatic fissures are more prominent than usual b/c of hepatic atrophy
hepatic and portal veins are often difficult to see b/c they are compressed
KEY findings - increase in the caudate to right lobe ratio
chiladiti syndrome where colon interposes b/w liver and anterolateral abd wall or diaphragm is much more common in cirrhosis
CT - may show arterial portal shunting, with early filling of one portal vein, and increased enhancement of the lobe it supplies
often increased density in the mesenteric fat from edema when compared to the retroperitoneal fat
findings of portal HTN include ascites, splenomegaly, and varices
varices visible on CT include paraesophageal, varices in gastrohepatic ligament and retroperitoneum, recanalized periumbilical vein, gastrorenal and splenorenal veins
look for HCC!
Hepatocellular carcinoma
80% of HCCs arise in cirrhotic livers
major risk factors include alcoholic cirrhosis, hepatitis, parasitic infection, & hemochromatosis
most pts are >50
high AFP level
tumor can be focal(most common), multifocal or infiltrative
most are hypodense on NCCT and enhance prominently in the arterial phase, b/c HCCs have more hepatic arterial flow than nl liver, which derives 80% of its flow from the portal system
necrosis is common, and 25% have Ca+
frequently invades the portal and/or hepatic veins and IVC
HCC Features
Masslike configuration
Arterial hyperenhancement
Portal venous phase or later phase hypoenhancement
Increase size by 10 mm or more in 1 year
Tumor within vein lumen
Focal Nodular Hyperplasia
second most common benign tumor of the liver (after hemangioma)
occurs mostly in women, but is NOT associated with birth control pills
only liver tumor with Kupffer cells
Tc SC scans 60% are normal uptake or hot(very helpful), 40% are cold(not helpful)
almost always have uptake on HIDA scans
often have a central scar, which does limit the DDx to FNH vs HCC, especially fibrolamellar type
NCCT - hypodense and homogeneous except for the scar
CECT - intense enhancement during the aretrial and portal phases, with rapid washout except in the scar, which retains contrast so that on delayed imaging the scar is hyperdense
Angio - hypervascular and have a spokewheel appearance
MRI, FNHs have distinctive features
often iso or only slightly hyperintense on T2(as opposed to malignant tumors) but the scar is hyper on T2
GRE, the vessels in the central scar are bright
Gad - have rapid filling and rapid washout, and the scar accumulates contrast, especially on delayed imaging
Hepatic adenoma
hepatic adenomas tend to occur in young females on birth control, with anabolic steroid use, or Type 1 GSD
large, >10cm, and solitary
usually bleed internally, but can rupture into the peritoneum
CT - usually hypodense (often very hypodense, almost like fat), but can have hyperdense areas related to hemorrhage
CECT - peripheral and then centripetal enhancement similar to hemangioma, except that there is rapid washout, as opposed to hemangioma which retains the contrast
MR - can be unique on T1 b/c they are usually bright due to the presence of fat, and may have additional bright areas related to hemorrhage
US - more often hyperechoic, and can have central hypoechoic areas of necrosis and hemorrhage
Liver hemangioma
second most common solid mass in the liver, exceeded only by mets
affect all ages, women>men
10% are multiple
most are asymptomatic, but giant hemangiomas may cause symptoms fom mass effect, hemorrhage or arteriovenous shunting
CT - well defined hypodense mass with density like blood veesels, peripheral globular enhancement with gradual filling in, retention of contrast on delayed imaging
Hepatic abscess
hepatic abscesses may be bacterial, parasitic or mycotic
pyogenic ones are gram negative and come from the biliary tree
other routes are hematogenous from portal vein or hepatic artery, and direct spread from adjacent organ or trauma
80% are in right lobe
2/3 of cases are multiple, and smaller abscesses are more likely to be multiple
CT usually shows a hypoattenuating lesion with an enhancing rim
20% have gas inside
many have septations
amebic abscesses are usually peripheral in location, in the right lobe, and tend to be unilocular
echinococcal (hydatid) abscesses usually have smaller daughter cysts within a larger cyst
Focal fat in caudate
fatty liver is a common response of hepatocytes to injury or toxins and has many causes, including diabetes, pancreatitis, obesity, alcoholism, malnutrition, steroids, glycogen storage dz, and chemotherapy
most common regions involved are the medial segment of the left lobe of the liver (adjacent to lig teres) and adjacent to the
GB
CT - hypodense
in and out of phase GRE - loss of signal on the out of phase
Features:
geographic borders, interdigitation of the borders with the adjacent nl liver, lack of mass effect, especially on the hepatic veesels, and rapid change over time (can develop and resolve in weeks)
DDx multiple hyperechoic liver lesions on US
mets, usually from a GI primary, especially colon ca
multifocal HCC
multiple hemangiomas
multiple adenomas, lipomas or FNHs
DDx Multiple calcified liver lesions
infections, especially prior granulomatous like histo, but also TB, ricketsia and others, parasites, and PCP
multiple abscesses and echinococcus can Ca+
metastatic dz from mucinous tumors of the colon, breast, ovary, stomach, melanoma or osteosarcoma
multiple Ca+ HCCs or hemangiomas, cysts or multiple Ca+ aneurysms
DDx Multiple low density / high T2 liver lesions
DDx Diffusely abnormal liver enhancement
Portal vein thrombosis
Causes
idiopathic
cirrhosis and portal HTN
tumors such as HCC, liver mets or panc ca
if you see thrombus in a portal vein, hepatic vein, IVC, or atrium, always check for HCC, RCC or adrenal carcinoma in adults, and wilms and hepatoblastoma in kids
vascular causes such as Budd Chiari
passive congestion of the liver from CHF, P vera, hypercoagulable state, sepsis, & abdominal abscess
CT signs
Increased size of PV, diameter >13mm
Low denisty thrombus in PV
PV is not enhancing or is not visualized
calcification in the portal vein in the thrombus or the wall - chronic
cavernous transformation - chronic
portal HTN - chronic
Budd Chiari
obstruction of hepatic venous outflow, either at the level of the hepatic veins, or in the IVC above the diaphragm
primary - obstructing membrane seen in the far east
secondary - can be from HCC, hepatic mets, RCC, oral contraceptives, chemo, P vera, hypercoagulable state, ¶sites in liver
thrombus may be visible in the hepatic veins or IVC on US, CT or MR
CT - liver is enlarged and has decreased density peripherally relative to the central aspects and caudate lobe
reversal on delayed images, as contrast washes out centrally but persists peripherally, so that now the periphery is hyperdense (also seen in CHF and constrictive pericarditis)
hypodensity(lack of flow) and lack of enhancement in hepatic veins in the hepatic venous phase of contrast
caudate lobe is spared b/c it has separate venous drainage to the IVC, and eventually the caudate enlarges
Multiple hypodense solid hepatic lesions
mets vs multifocal HCC
less likely possiblities would include multiple abscesses, hemangiomas or adenomas
look for evidence of cirrhosis or portal vein invasion which might sway you toward HCC, whereas a primary elsewhere on the scan which would lead you to mets, or gas which would suggest abscesses
need history for infection or primary cancer
AFP might also help distinguish mets vs HCC, but ultimately you may need a biopsy
Hemochromatosis
Primary form involves multiple organs → liver, pancreas, heart, bone marrow
Secondary form involves reticuloendothelial system organs only (liver and spleen)
Biliary
High Bile Duct Stricture
Klatskin tumor
Gallbladder CA
HCC
Metastatic nodes
Mid CBD smooth stricture
Distal Bile Duct Stricture
Pancreatic CA
Cholangio CA
Ampullary CA
Duodenal CA
Causes of Bile Duct Thickening
sclerosing cholangitis → associated w/ ulcerative colitis
bile duct stones
indwelling stents
AIDS cholangitis
oriental cholangiohepatitis
pyogenic cholangitis
choloangiocarcinoma → associated with luminal obliteration
pancreatitis
Cholangitis
Sclerosing cholangitis
progressive inflammatory process that usually involves the biliary system diffusely
more common in men and is associated with UC in 70% of cases (but only about 10% of UC pts get SC)
assoicated conditions include Riedel’s thyroiditis, retroperitoneal and mediastinal fibrosis, and Crohn’s
diffuse or localized areas of narrowing and relative dilation (beaded appearance) involving both the intra and extrahepatic ducts
may have a “pruned tree” appearance, resulting from dimished arboriztaion of intrahepatic ducts
cholangioca is a complication
DDx: AIDS cholangiopathy - similar picture, and cannot be distinguished on radiology alone
Cholecystitis with perforation
CT findings in acute cholecystitis
Gallstones in 95%
Hydropic
GB, trv diameter >5cm 3.
GB wall >3mm thick
Halo of subserosal edema in
GB wall
Pericholecystic fluid, which signifies perforation
Increased bile density >20HU
Stranding in the pericholecystic fat
Increased enhancement of
GB wall
Air in lumen or wall if emphysematous
Mirizzi’s syndrome
stone is impacted in the cystic duct or gallbladder neck, with the mass effect from the stone and inflammation causing compression and narrowing of the adjacent CBD or CHD
narrowing is usually eccentric, worse on the right side, near where the stone is
intrahepatic ducts may be dilated d/t obstruction
usually cholecystitis due to the
GB/cystic duct stone, and therefore the ERCP shows absent or impaired filling of the
GB
if not recognized, the surgeon may go in and mistake the common hepatic duct for the cystic duct and ligate the CHD
Cholangiocarcinoma
Klatskin tumor
cholangiocarcinoma arising at the confluence of the right and left hepatic ducts
can have multiple appearances
scirrhous pattern - form strictures
polypoid masses projecting into the lumen
liver masses, similar in appearance to other liver neoplasms
extrahepatic cholangiocas tend to have a better prognosis than intrahepatic
overall prognosis is poor b/c they invade the portal vein and bile ducts
Klatskin tumor is usually the scirrhous type that grows along ducts and thickens their walls
CT - mass in the region of the porta hepatis
US - duct dilation, isolation of the right and left duct segments (meaning they never communicate), mass or bile duct wall thickening at the hilus, and lobar liver atrophy with crowded dilated bile ducts
Cholangiocarcinoma in sclerosing cholangitis
cholangiocarcinoma complicates PSC in about 15%, and the already abnormal ducts can mask a carcinoma
an area with more marked dilation than the other areas, interval stricture formation and biliary dilation on f/up imaging (usually progresses slowly), filling defects >1cm, or dominant stricture suggests cholangioca
REMEMBER to look for cholangioca in any SC case
Choledochocele
protrusion of dilated intramural CBD into the duodenum, similar to a ureterocele
smooth sac like dilation of the intramural segment of the CBD
barium studies show a smooth well defined intraluminal filling defect in the region of the papilla that changes in shape with compression and peristalsis and does not fill with contrast
Pancreas
DDx Cystic Lesion of the Pancreas
Distinguishing features of pancreatic cystic lesions:
Typical characteristics | IPMN | MCN | SC | PSEUDO | SPN | LEC | cNET | cPDAC |
Age group | Elderly | Middle | Middle-elderly | Any | Young | Elderly | Middle-Elderly | Elderly |
Gender | >50% male | 95% female | >50% female | >50% male | 80%–90% female | 80% male | 50% each | >50% male |
History | Asx; pain; jaundice | Asx; Pain; nausea | Asx; VHL | Pancreatitis | Asx; pain; nausea | Asx | Asx; Fxnl; MEN | Asx; pain; ± jaundice |
% of all cysts | 17%–40% | 9%–28% | 7%–36% | 1%–19% | 1%–13% | <2% | <8% | 13%–16% |
Location in pancreas | Head in 70%; multifocal | Body/Tail in 95% | Anywhere | Anywhere | Anywhere | Peripheral | Anywhere | Anywhere |
Shape | Ovoid | Spheroid | Ovoid | Spheroid | Ovoid | Ovoid | Spheroid | Variable |
Locularity | Any | Uni- or oligo- | Oligo- or multi- | Uni- | Oligo- or Multi- | Oligo- | Uni- | Any |
Duct communication | Common | No | No | Common | No | No | No | Some |
Calcification | No | No | Central sunburst | No | Some | No | Some | No |
Cyst fluid appearance | Viscous, clear, muc. | Viscous, clear, muc. | Thin, clear, nonmuc. | Opaque, bloody/ necrotic debris | Opaque, bloody/ necrotic debris | Nonmuc., crystalline debris | Nonmuc. | Thin |
High CEA/Mucin | + | + | − | − | − | − | − | ± |
High Ca19-9 | ± | ± | − | − | − | − | − | ± |
High amylase | + | − | − | + | − | − | − | ± |
Epithelium | Columnar, papillary | Columnar | Cuboidal | No epithelium | Poorly cohesive cells with nuclear grooves | Squamoid | Uniform | Gland-forming |
Stroma | Fibrotic | Ovarian | Fibrotic | Fibrotic | Sometimes hyalinized | Lymphoid | Sometimes hyalinized | Fibrotic |
* Abbreviations: IPMN: intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm; MCN: mucinous cystic neoplasm; SC: serous cystadenoma; PSEUDO: pancreatic pseudocyst; SPN: solid-pseudopapillary neoplasm; LEC: lymphoepithelial cyst; cNET: cystic neuroendocrine tumor; cPDAC: pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma with cystic degeneration; VHL: von Hippel-Lindau disease; muc.: mucinous; Nonmuc: nonmucinous; Asx: asymptomatic; Fxnl: functional.
Cystic Pancreatic Masses
Cystic lesion on CT–> get MRI/MRCP to characterize.
If Simple unilocular cyst < 2 cm (maybe 3 cm 35/36 were benign at this size in one study) then follow up. Studies have shown these cause no morbidity/mortality.
If micro/macrocystic and < 4 cm then follow. Many of us may not be comfortable calling a serous cystadenoma.
Otherwise EUS/FNA for diagnosis and then appropriate management can be determined.
CT findings in acute pancreatitis
focal or diffuse gland enlargement
focal or diffuse decrease in gland density
blurring of pancreatic margins from inflammation
stranding/inflammatory changes in the peripancreatic fat
thickening of retroperitoneal fascial planes such as gerota’s or lateral conal fascia
Pancreatitis with pseudocyst vs abscess
abscess will have a thicker wall than a pseudocyst
abscess may have gas
any contained fluid collection could be an abscess, so you need to rely on clinical signs of infection
most pseudocysts are in and around the pancreas, but they can be almost anywhere, including in the liver, spleen, or thorax
most are well defined, smooth walled
often have septations/mulitloculations
smaller ones resolve on their own, but once 6cm this becomes unlikely
complications include rupture bleeding and infection
Chronic pancreatitis
pancreatic fibrosis and atrophy
likely secondary to alcohol or gallstones
Ca+ in the distribution of the pancreas
irregular dilation of the PD with strictures and stenoses, and there may be filling defects from stones
may also be a CBD stricture, and inflammatory extrinsic impressions on the duodenum
pancreas may be small, diffusely or focally enlarged, or heterogeneous
CT can show duct dilation, Ca+ and gland atrophy
ERCP can show duct strictures & dilations and side branch enlargement
pseudocysts may be present
DDx multiple pancreatic cysts or masses
cysts - VHL or ADPCKD (VHL much more likely to involve pancreas than is ADPCKD), parasitic like echinococcus, multiple pseudocysts from pancreatitis, or cystic mets (RCC, lung, breast,melanoma, HCC ovarian)
solid - mets, multiple primaries (such as multiple islet cell tumors in MEN) or rarely lymphoma
Pancreas Divisum
congenital anomaly
failure of fusion of the dorsal and ventral pancreatic buds
either entirely separate or with a thin channel connecting them
dorsal duct (Santorini) drains the body, tail and superior portion of head into the minor papilla
ventral duct (Wirsung) drains the inferior head and uncinate via the major papilla
at ERCP, if only the major duct is cannulized, only the short ventral duct fills
to see the dorsal duct, the endoscopist needs to cannulate the minor papilla
CT may show 2 ducts, or separation of the ventral and dorsal portions of the pancreas by a fat cleft, or lobulation of the pancreatic head
higher risk of pancreatitis b/c the bulk of the bile is drainng via a small duct
Annular pancreas
Pancreatic head mass with biliary dilation
pancreatic adenocarcinoma vs pancreatitis
cannot be distinguished on imaging alone
typical findings for adenoCA:
focal enlargement of pancreas
calcifications are RARE in pancreatic adenoCA
hypoechoic/hypodense/hypointense mass ± duct dilation and atrophy of adjacent parenchyma
double duct sign=dilation of both PD and CBD, which is suggestive of pancreatic adenoca, but is NOT specific
UGI may show compression or invasion of stomach, duodenum or transverse colon
risk factors for adenoca include smoking, alcohol, diabetes, pancreatitis, family history and high fat diet
nonresectability: vascular encasement of SMA, celiac etc, liver mets, adenopathy, ascites and invasion of adjacent organs
Cystic mass with Ca+ in pancreatic tail
if the Ca+ is inside the mass, then this would most likely be a serous cystadenoma
1/3 of these have amorphous central Ca+ (it is the pancreatic tumor which most often Ca+)
can occur in any portion of the pancreas, and tends to occur in pts over 60, F>M
composed of numerous minute cysts separated by septations
NOT premalignant
CECT - swiss cheese appearance b/c of the enhancing septae +/- Ca+
other possibilties - necrotic adenoca or nonfunctioning cystic islet cell tumor, cystic mets from a mucinous source & cystic teratoma(rare)
if the Ca+ is in the rim or in septations, this could be a pseudocyst, or a mucinous cystadenoma
compsed of <6 cysts, with each cyst >2cm
tumor of elderly females
CT - multiolocular or unilocular, usually in the tail
may have septae, papillary projections or mural nodules
malignant or premalignant
15% have curvilinear wall Ca+
Serous cystadenoma in pancreas
US - lobulated solid mass with mixed hypoechoic and echogenic areas, with the cysts being too small to resolve
central scar may be seen as an echodensity
NCCT - hypodense and lobulated in contour
CECT - swiss cheese appearance b/c of tiny cysts
central Ca+ may be seen and the central stellate scar may be seen too
asymptomatic pts or pts who are a high surgical risk can avoid surgery b/c it is a benign lesion
treatment is surgical
Pancreatic necrosis
devitalized pancreatic tissue secondary to acute pancreatitis and resultant ischemia
diffuse or localized decrease in density of pancreatic parenchyma, WHICH DOES NOT ENHANCE post contrast
Pancreatic calcifications w/ cirrhosis
alcoholic or former alcoholic who has chronic panreatitis and cirrhosis, both of which are sequella of alcohol abuse
bile duct stones, such as in oriental cholagiohepatitis etc, and has biliary cirrhosis and pancreatitis from stones as well
Young pt w/ mass in pancreatic head w/ calcification
solid and papillary epithelial neoplasm. There are not many pancreatic tumors that occur in a pt this young
for SPEN, 24 is the mean age
more common in black women
peripheral Ca+ may be seen on plain film or CT
US - well demarcated solid mass with hypoechoic areas (so it is mixed solid/cystic) d/t necrosis and hemorrhage
CT - muscle density mass with hypodense areas
low grade malignancy and is curable with surgery
DDx: islet cell tumor, which can Ca+ when large, teratoma or hemangioma
DDx dilated panc duct
Miscellaneous
Patterns of Attenuation in Bowel Wall Thickening
Homogeneous
Common
Submucosal hemorrhage
Lymphoma
Small adenocarcinoma
Uncommon
Heterogeneous
Stratified attenuation
Common
Ischemia
Infectious enterocolitis
Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis
Vasculitis, lupus, Henoch-Schönlein purpura
Radiation
Bowel edema related to cirrhosis or low-protein state
Uncommon
Infiltrating scirrhous carcinoma (usually stomach or rectum)
Residual fluid and contrast material
Submucosal fat deposition
Pneumatosis
Mixed attenuation
Length of Bowel Wall Thickening
Focal (<10 cm)
Common
Uncommon
Lymphoma
Tuberculosis
Crohn’s disease
Segmental (10–30 cm)
Common
Lymphoma
Crohn’s disease
Infectious ileitis
Radiation
Submucosal hemorrhage
Ischemia
Uncommon
Diffuse
Lymph Nodes
The number, size, location, and attenuation of lymph nodes in the abdominal and pelvic cavities are important associated findings when examining patients with thickened bowel
When present, especially in the sigmoid or descending colon, the main differential diagnosis is adenocarcinoma versus diverticulitis
Attenuation
Low-attenuation lymph nodes with a rim of contrast enhancement or calcified lymph nodes should alert one to the possibility of tuberculosis, other mycobacterial infections, or histoplasmosis
In a patient with AIDS, the presence of high-attenuation lymph nodes suggests the possibility of Kaposi's sarcoma.
Signs of free air on supine film
football sign
lucency over the liver or at its inferior edge
Rigler’s
traingles or rhomboids of air b/w bowel loops
air in lesser sac or morrison’s pouch, oulining of falciform
in kids, air outlining umbilical ligaments or in scrotum
Retroperitoneal air
results from trauma, inflammatory dz of retroperitoneal portions of GI tract, such as diverticulitis (asc colon, desc colon, rectum, parts of duodenum), BE, gas producing organisms, or from a renal process
3 spaces: perirenal, anterior pararenal and posterior pararenal
more fixed in location than peritoneal air (doesn’t change when pt moves) and it tends to be linear in shape
DDx psoas abscess
TB spread from the spine(Pott’s dz) or kidney
surgery
hematogenous in immunocompromised pt
IVDA
colonic process such as diverticlutis
Crohn’s
appendicitis
perforating neoplasm
treatment is percutaneous drainage and antibiotics
Pneumatosis
most common cause of portal venous gas is bowel infarction in adults or NEC in kids
numerous other more benign causes such as penetrating ulcer, acute gastric or intestinal distension, IBD, iatrogenic from recent BE or endoscopy, and in babies from umbilical venous catheters
pneumatosis intestinalis is a condition when air collects in the subserosa or submucosa of the bowel wall. It too has many causes, with ischemia being the most common
other causes include surgery, NEC, Pseudomembranous colitis, IBD, infection, steroid users, Scleroderma, SLE and dermatomyositis, obstruction, trauma, BE/endoscopy and organ transplant, asthma CF or COPD
can also be primary, which is a benign condition, and usually has rounded(submucosal) rather than linear(subserosal) gas collections
Intussusception
invagination of one bowel loop into the other, with peristalsis pushing the proximal segment further into the distal one
results in obstruction, ischemia or perforation
children - 90% are idiopathic, probably related to lymphoid hyperplasia
adults - overwhelming majority are related to an underlying lesion which serves as a lead point
lead points include benign tumors such as lipoma, leiomyoma or adenoma, malignant tumors, meckel’s tic, prolapsed gastric mucosa, ectopic pancreatic rest, foreign body and feeding tubes
can also be related to underlying diseases without lead points, including celiac, Whipple’s and scleroderma
SBFT - coiled spring appearance
US - target sign in TRV plane and pseudokidney in longitudinal
CT - donut sign with fat b/w the 2 loops
Gallstone ileus
Lymphoma
non-hodgkins lymphoma produces either multiple enlarged individual nodes or conglomerate nodal masses, which may encase vessels, displace organs or obstruct the ureters
spleen is also commonly involved, with diffuse involvement leading to splenomegaly being more common than focal lesions
Carcinoid
type of APUD tumor
in the abdomen, they are most commonly found in the appendix, but most symptomatic ones are in the small bowel
all are premalignant
most occur in the ileum, especially the distal 2 feet, and carcinoid is the most likely cause for a submucosal mass in the ileum
ileal carcinoid is the most aggressive, and the likelihood of mets increases with size
>2cm have 90% chance of mets
often multiple
when it is a polyp, it is still potentially curable with resection
with progression, there is growth into the mesentery and a desmoplastic response in the mesentery, with tethering, kinking and luminal narrowing
narrowed segment with crowded folds leading to a curved segment with drawn out folds
CT - mesenteric mass with curvilinear strands extending thru the mesentery toward surrounding SB loops, which have thickened walls
carcinoid syndrome occurs when there are liver mets, in which case serotonin is directly secreted into the venous sytem without detox by the liver, and the pt gets bronchospasm, wheezing, diarrhea and flushing
carcinoid mets to liver are hypervascular and enhance
other hypervascular tumors include islet cell, melanoma, chorio, pheochromocytoma, breast and thyroid (CT CHIMP)
Abdominal Hernias
Incisional
Inguinal: direct (through Hesselbach’s triangle)/ indirect (along canal)
Paraumbilical: through linea alba
Spigelian: through linea semilunaris at lateral edge of rectus abdominis
Lumbar hernias
Paraduodenal hernias (= mesocolic hernias):
#1 internal hernia (> paracecal; lesser sac; transmesenteric hernias)
Right paraduodenal: behind hepatic flexure; fossa of Waldeyer; associated with cecal malrotation + Ladd’s bands; usually small contains portions of mesentery + vessels (middle colic artery + IMV)
Left paraduodenal: fossa of Landzert near splenic flexure; often large; contain jejunal loops → mary become incarcerated → obstruction/ ischemia
Obturator: SB → ↑ herniation/ strangulation; Howship-Romberg sign (compression of obturator nerve → pain along superomedial thigh)
Krukenberg tumors
mets to the ovaries, usually from gastric or colon/appendix ca, breast ca, pelvic (CBS)
in the setting of gastric or colon cancer, any cystic or solid lesion involving the ovaries should be considered mets until proven o/w.