Cystic lesions of the pancreas are increasingly being recognized due to the widespread use of cross-sectional imaging. The initial evaluation of a pancreatic cyst should be directed toward exclusion of a pseudocyst. Patients with pseudocysts generally have a history of acute or chronic pancreatitis, whereas those with cystic tumors most often lack such a history. Several types of cystic lesions are encountered in the pancreas. Because of morphologic overlap at imaging, accurate characterization of these lesions can be difficult. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging are excellent modalities for both initial detection and characterization of cystic pancreatic lesions. An imaging classification system for these lesions has been proposed that is based on the morphologic features of the lesion. This system can be helpful in characterizing lesions, narrowing the differential diagnosis, and making decisions regarding the treatment of affected patients. Endoscopic ultrasonography-guided aspiration and biopsy is useful in cases that are indeterminate at cross-sectional imaging or that require observation.
MRI enables more confident assessment of the morphology of small cysts than MDCT, but the accuracy of the two imaging techniques for cyst characterization is comparable. MDCT and MRI have high accuracy in classifying cysts into mucinous and nonmucinous categories and perform similarly in estimating histologic aggressiveness.
The majority (n = 75) of small pancreatic cysts were benign. Thirty-six cysts were unilocular, and virtually all of these (n = 35) were benign. The presence of septa was associated with borderline or in situ malignancy in 20% (10 of 50) of cases.
The assessment of penile cancer on the basis of clinical findings alone can often result in inaccurate staging and suboptimal treatment. Imaging of primary penile cancer and metastatic lymphadenopathy can help optimize planning of both primary tumor resection and treatment for lymph node metastases. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is the most accurate imaging modality in the assessment of primary penile cancers, which usually manifest as solitary, ill-defined infiltrating tumors that are hypointense on both T1- and T2-weighted MR images. T2-weighted MR imaging allows delineation of the tumor margin and of any extension into the penile shaft. On gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted images, the tumors enhance to a greater extent than do the corpora cavernosa. In addition, the recently introduced technique known as lymphotrophic nanoparticle-enhanced MR imaging can help identify metastatic lymph node disease. However, further studies will be needed to determine the role of this imaging technique in clinical practice. Computed tomography does not clearly depict the local extension of primary penile cancer; however, it is useful in assessing metastases and postoperative complications.
Repeat examinations account for nearly one-third of high-cost radiology examinations and represent an increasing proportion of such examinations. Most repeat examinations are initiated clinically without a recommendation by a radiologist.
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