2012
DOI: 10.1097/rlu.0b013e31824c5ef5
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Cosmetic-Related Changes on 18F-FDG PET/CT

Abstract: We present 4 cases of cosmetic-related changes on 18F-FDG PET/CT. These cases represent post-treatment changes from facial juvederm injection, silicone injection in the chest wall and gluteal areas, paraffin injection in the gluteal region, and liposuction. Recognition of cosmetic-related changes and their appearance on PET and CT will help to avoid potential false-positive interpretations.

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…In spite of the fact that neither CT nor MRI shows specific patterns for identifying PAAG or high‐density HA deposits, the knowledge of the extent of the deposits can be useful. On the other hand, fillers can also produce hypercaptation areas on positron emission tomography–CT due to inflammation, which may generate false‐positive findings or at least difficulties for the correct staging of a malignancy 34 …”
Section: Other Imaging Methods For Identifying Cosmetic Fillersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In spite of the fact that neither CT nor MRI shows specific patterns for identifying PAAG or high‐density HA deposits, the knowledge of the extent of the deposits can be useful. On the other hand, fillers can also produce hypercaptation areas on positron emission tomography–CT due to inflammation, which may generate false‐positive findings or at least difficulties for the correct staging of a malignancy 34 …”
Section: Other Imaging Methods For Identifying Cosmetic Fillersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Twelve articles received a score of 4, with an excellent presentation of the reported cases. 10 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Nineteen articles scored 3.5, 9 20 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 primarily due to a lack of confirmation by a dermatologist or cosmetic surgeon of the history and type of procedure done.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among the 53 cosmetic procedures, 8 (15.0%) were silicone injections 13 24 26 28 32 2 (3.8%) were silicone implants, 30 39 6 (11.3%) were paraffin injections, 25 31 10 (18.9%) were fat injections, 15 20 22 34 35 40 4 (7.5%) were gold wires, 9 18 27 38 14 (26.4%) involved calcium hydroxyapatite (CaHa), 10 14 19 21 29 33 37 41 1 (1.9%) was an autogenous costochondral graft, 36 4 (7.5%) involved polyalkylimide gel, 17 and 4 (7.54%) involved hyaluronic acid. 16 23 The cases mostly presented with either swelling (18/53, 34.0%) or no symptoms (15/53, 28.3%), and were found incidentally (19/53, 35.8%). The material was usually bilateral (42/53, 79.2%) and in the cheek and zygoma area (35/53, 66.0%).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On CT, HA fillers appear as areas of soft tissue attenuation. On PET-CT, they are occasionally FDG-avid [ 55 ].…”
Section: Types Of Facial Fillers and Normal Imaging Featuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although FDG CT/MRI is not an imaging modality of choice for the detection of filler-related complications, it is increasingly used for the detection of a source of infection and inflammation, sarcoidosis, and large vessel vasculitis. The increased cost of treating multi-drug resistant infections in immune-compromised patients, diabetics, and elderly patients justifies the use of expensive PET-CT. FDG PET-CT is very sensitive but lacks the specificity to differentiate aseptic inflammation from septic infection [ 55 , 81 , 82 ].…”
Section: Pitfalls In Image Interpretationsmentioning
confidence: 99%