Parenchymal iron deposition occurs in hemochromatosis, while iron is deposited in reticuloendothelial (RE) cells after blood transfusions or rhabdomyolysis. Magnetic resonance images of patients with decreased liver signal intensity on T2-weighted images at 1.5 T were blindly compared in an effort to distinguish these conditions. In each of five patients with hemochromatosis, the pancreas had low signal intensity, but splenic signal intensity was decreased in only one. In contrast, only three of the 16 patients with RE iron overload had low pancreatic signal intensity, while all of these patients either had low splenic signal intensity (n = 14) or previously underwent splenectomy (n = 2). Distinction among these causes of iron deposition is clinically important because parenchymal iron overload from hemochromatosis may produce significant tissue damage, while the RE iron of transfusions and rhabdomyolysis is of little clinical consequence.
Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging was performed in 14 patients with biopsy-proved polycythemia vera (n = 4) or myelofibrosis (n = 10) to determine whether MR imaging findings can be correlated with the clinicopathologic diagnosis and established clinical parameters of severity (serum lactate dehydrogenase [LDH] and cholesterol levels) and chronicity (spleen size). Evaluation of marrow in the proximal femurs showed that patients could be categorized into three distinct groups based on anatomic patterns of normal fatty and abnormal low-signal-intensity (non-fatty) marrow in the femoral capital epiphysis (FCE) and greater trochanter (GT). Patients with nonfatty marrow in both the FCE and GT (n = 8) had significantly higher serum LDH (P less than .02) and lower serum cholesterol (P less than .02) levels than patients with fatty marrow in at least the GT (n = 6). Splenic volume, as measured from MR images, was significantly greater in the myelofibrosis group than in the polycythemia vera group (P less than .001). MR imaging provided a better understanding of these hematologic disorders and novel parameters for classification that are different from conventional histologic and laboratory data.
The ultrasound findings in three cases of radiation-induced hepatic injury are described and compared with computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging findings. Fatty infiltration of the liver was present in two of the cases in which concurrent chemotherapy was being administered. On ultrasound B-scans, the regions of radiation injury were hypoechoic relative to the remainder of the liver. This finding was more obvious in the patients with fatty livers. CT scans on the patients with fatty infiltrated livers showed higher attenuation in the irradiated region than in unexposed liver. In the patient where no fatty infiltration was present, the radiated section of liver had lower attenuation consistent with previous reports. Magnetic resonance imaging showed decreased signal in the exposed areas on T1 weighted images.
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