Erschienen in:
19.09.2016 | Case Report
MRI-guided Wire Localization Surgical Biopsy in an Adolescent Patient with a Difficult to Diagnose Case of Lymphoma
verfasst von:
Scott M. Thompson, Krzysztof R. Gorny, Danielle E. Jondal, Karen L. Rech, Samir Mardini, David A. Woodrum
Erschienen in:
CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology
|
Ausgabe 1/2017
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Abstract
A 17-year-old previously healthy female presented with a progressive soft tissue infiltrative process involving the neck and thorax. Extensive diagnostic evaluation including multiple imaging, laboratory, and biopsy studies was nondiagnostic. Due to an urgent need to establish a diagnosis and several previous nondiagnostic biopsies, she was referred to interventional radiology for MRI-guided wire localization immediately prior to open surgical biopsy. Under general anesthesia, wires were placed in the areas of increased T2 signal within the bilateral splenius capitis muscles using intermittent MRI-guidance followed by immediate surgical biopsy down to the wires. Pathology confirmed the diagnosis of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.