Skip to main content
Erschienen in: Pediatric Radiology 9/2012

01.09.2012 | Original Article

MRI for clinically suspected pediatric appendicitis: an implemented program

verfasst von: Michael M. Moore, Cristy N. Gustas, Arabinda K. Choudhary, Sosamma T. Methratta, Michael A. Hulse, Glenn Geeting, Kathleen D. Eggli, Danielle K. B. Boal

Erschienen in: Pediatric Radiology | Ausgabe 9/2012

Einloggen, um Zugang zu erhalten

Abstract

Background

Emergent MRI is now a viable alternative to CT for evaluating appendicitis while avoiding the detrimental effects of ionizing radiation. However, primary employment of MRI in the setting of clinically suspected pediatric appendicitis has remained significantly underutilized.

Objective

To describe our institution’s development and the results of a fully implemented clinical program using MRI as the primary imaging evaluation for children with suspected appendicitis.

Materials and methods

A four-sequence MRI protocol consisting of coronal and axial single-shot turbo spin-echo (SS-TSE) T2, coronal spectral adiabatic inversion recovery (SPAIR), and axial SS-TSE T2 with fat saturation was performed on 208 children, ages 3 to 17 years, with clinically suspected appendicitis. No intravenous or oral contrast material was administered. No sedation was administered. Data collection includes two separate areas: time parameter analysis and MRI diagnostic results.

Results

Diagnostic accuracy of MRI for pediatric appendicitis indicated a sensitivity of 97.6% (CI: 87.1–99.9%), specificity 97.0% (CI: 93.2–99.0%), positive predictive value 88.9% (CI: 76.0–96.3%), and negative predictive value 99.4% (CI: 96.6–99.9%). Time parameter analysis indicated clinical feasibility, with time requested to first sequence obtained mean of 78.7 +/− 52.5 min, median 65 min; first-to-last sequence time stamp mean 14.2 +/− 8.8 min, median 12 min; last sequence to report mean 57.4 +/− 35.2 min, median 46 min. Mean age was 11.2 +/− 3.6 years old. Girls represented 57% of patients.

Conclusion

MRI is an effective and efficient method of imaging children with clinically suspected appendicitis. Using an expedited four-sequence protocol, sensitivity and specificity are comparable to CT while avoiding the detrimental effects of ionizing radiation.
Literatur
1.
Zurück zum Zitat Hernanz-Schulman M (2010) CT and US in the diagnosis of appendicitis: an argument for CT. Radiology 255:3–7PubMedCrossRef Hernanz-Schulman M (2010) CT and US in the diagnosis of appendicitis: an argument for CT. Radiology 255:3–7PubMedCrossRef
2.
Zurück zum Zitat Callahan M, Rodriguez D, Taylor G (2002) CT of appendicitis in children. Radiology 224:325–332PubMedCrossRef Callahan M, Rodriguez D, Taylor G (2002) CT of appendicitis in children. Radiology 224:325–332PubMedCrossRef
3.
Zurück zum Zitat Brenner D, Hall E (2007) Computed tomography–an increasing source of radiation exposure. N Engl J Med 357:2277–2284PubMedCrossRef Brenner D, Hall E (2007) Computed tomography–an increasing source of radiation exposure. N Engl J Med 357:2277–2284PubMedCrossRef
5.
Zurück zum Zitat Tkacz J, Anderson S, Soto J (2009) MR imaging in gastrointestinal emergencies. Radiographics 29:1767–1780PubMedCrossRef Tkacz J, Anderson S, Soto J (2009) MR imaging in gastrointestinal emergencies. Radiographics 29:1767–1780PubMedCrossRef
6.
Zurück zum Zitat Hormann M, Paya K, Eibenberger K et al (1998) MR imaging in children with nonperforated acute appendicitis: value of unenhanced MR imaging in sonographically selected cases. AJR 171:467–470PubMed Hormann M, Paya K, Eibenberger K et al (1998) MR imaging in children with nonperforated acute appendicitis: value of unenhanced MR imaging in sonographically selected cases. AJR 171:467–470PubMed
7.
Zurück zum Zitat Cobben L, Groot I, Kingma L et al (2009) A simple MRI protocol in patients with clinically suspected appendicitis: results in 138 patients and effect on outcome of appendectomy. Eur Radiol 19:1175–1183PubMedCrossRef Cobben L, Groot I, Kingma L et al (2009) A simple MRI protocol in patients with clinically suspected appendicitis: results in 138 patients and effect on outcome of appendectomy. Eur Radiol 19:1175–1183PubMedCrossRef
8.
Zurück zum Zitat Krishnamoorthi R, Ramarajan N, Wang N et al (2011) Effectiveness of a staged US and CT protocol for the diagnosis of pediatric appendicitis: reducing radiation exposure in the age of ALARA. Radiology 259:231–239PubMedCrossRef Krishnamoorthi R, Ramarajan N, Wang N et al (2011) Effectiveness of a staged US and CT protocol for the diagnosis of pediatric appendicitis: reducing radiation exposure in the age of ALARA. Radiology 259:231–239PubMedCrossRef
9.
Zurück zum Zitat Edelstein W, Mahesh M, Carrino J (2010) MRI: time is dose–and money and versatility. JACR 7:650–652PubMed Edelstein W, Mahesh M, Carrino J (2010) MRI: time is dose–and money and versatility. JACR 7:650–652PubMed
10.
Zurück zum Zitat Barger R, Nandalur K (2010) Diagnostic performance of magnetic resonance imaging in the detection of appendicitis in adults: a meta-analysis. Acad Radiol 17:1211–1216PubMedCrossRef Barger R, Nandalur K (2010) Diagnostic performance of magnetic resonance imaging in the detection of appendicitis in adults: a meta-analysis. Acad Radiol 17:1211–1216PubMedCrossRef
11.
Zurück zum Zitat Doria A, Moineddin R, Kellenberger C et al (2006) US or CT for diagnosis of appendicitis in children and adults? a meta-analysis. Radiology 241:83–94PubMedCrossRef Doria A, Moineddin R, Kellenberger C et al (2006) US or CT for diagnosis of appendicitis in children and adults? a meta-analysis. Radiology 241:83–94PubMedCrossRef
12.
Zurück zum Zitat Kaiser S, Frenckner B, Jorulf H (2002) Suspected appendicitis in children: US and CT—a prospective randomized study. Radiology 223:633–638PubMedCrossRef Kaiser S, Frenckner B, Jorulf H (2002) Suspected appendicitis in children: US and CT—a prospective randomized study. Radiology 223:633–638PubMedCrossRef
13.
Zurück zum Zitat Baldisserotto M, Valduga S, da Cunha CF (2008) MR imaging evaluation of the normal appendix in children and adolescents. Radiology 249:278–284PubMedCrossRef Baldisserotto M, Valduga S, da Cunha CF (2008) MR imaging evaluation of the normal appendix in children and adolescents. Radiology 249:278–284PubMedCrossRef
14.
Zurück zum Zitat Ganguli S, Raptopoulos V, Komlos F et al (2006) Right lower quadrant pain: value of the nonvisualized appendix in patients at multidetector CT. Radiology 241:175–180PubMedCrossRef Ganguli S, Raptopoulos V, Komlos F et al (2006) Right lower quadrant pain: value of the nonvisualized appendix in patients at multidetector CT. Radiology 241:175–180PubMedCrossRef
Metadaten
Titel
MRI for clinically suspected pediatric appendicitis: an implemented program
verfasst von
Michael M. Moore
Cristy N. Gustas
Arabinda K. Choudhary
Sosamma T. Methratta
Michael A. Hulse
Glenn Geeting
Kathleen D. Eggli
Danielle K. B. Boal
Publikationsdatum
01.09.2012
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Pediatric Radiology / Ausgabe 9/2012
Print ISSN: 0301-0449
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1998
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00247-012-2412-4

Weitere Artikel der Ausgabe 9/2012

Pediatric Radiology 9/2012 Zur Ausgabe

Akuter Schwindel: Wann lohnt sich eine MRT?

28.04.2024 Schwindel Nachrichten

Akuter Schwindel stellt oft eine diagnostische Herausforderung dar. Wie nützlich dabei eine MRT ist, hat eine Studie aus Finnland untersucht. Immerhin einer von sechs Patienten wurde mit akutem ischämischem Schlaganfall diagnostiziert.

Screening-Mammografie offenbart erhöhtes Herz-Kreislauf-Risiko

26.04.2024 Mammografie Nachrichten

Routinemäßige Mammografien helfen, Brustkrebs frühzeitig zu erkennen. Anhand der Röntgenuntersuchung lassen sich aber auch kardiovaskuläre Risikopatientinnen identifizieren. Als zuverlässiger Anhaltspunkt gilt die Verkalkung der Brustarterien.

S3-Leitlinie zu Pankreaskrebs aktualisiert

23.04.2024 Pankreaskarzinom Nachrichten

Die Empfehlungen zur Therapie des Pankreaskarzinoms wurden um zwei Off-Label-Anwendungen erweitert. Und auch im Bereich der Früherkennung gibt es Aktualisierungen.

Fünf Dinge, die im Kindernotfall besser zu unterlassen sind

18.04.2024 Pädiatrische Notfallmedizin Nachrichten

Im Choosing-Wisely-Programm, das für die deutsche Initiative „Klug entscheiden“ Pate gestanden hat, sind erstmals Empfehlungen zum Umgang mit Notfällen von Kindern erschienen. Fünf Dinge gilt es demnach zu vermeiden.

Update Radiologie

Bestellen Sie unseren Fach-Newsletter und bleiben Sie gut informiert.