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Contrast‐Enhanced Sonography of the Lung for Differential Diagnosis of Atelectasis
Author(s) -
Görg Christian,
Bert Tillmann,
Kring Rudolf
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of ultrasound in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.574
H-Index - 91
eISSN - 1550-9613
pISSN - 0278-4297
DOI - 10.7863/jum.2006.25.1.35
Subject(s) - medicine , atelectasis , contrast (vision) , differential diagnosis , radiology , lung , lung ultrasound , ultrasonography , pathology , artificial intelligence , computer science
Objective. Because of the absence of air in atelectatic tissue, sonography allows visualization of lung atelectasis and may characterize pulmonary and bronchial arterial vascularity by contrast‐enhanced sonography (CES). Methods. Thirty consecutive patients with obstructive atelectasis (OA) (n = 17) and compression atelectasis (n = 13) were retrospectively studied by CES using a second‐generation sulfur hexafluoride contrast agent (SonoVue [BR1]; Bracco SpA, Milan, Italy). The following CES parameters were evaluated: (1) time to enhancement (TE) of the contrast agent after intravenous application was determined and classified as short TE and delayed TE (short TE, ≤6 seconds; versus delayed TE, >7 seconds); and (2) extent of enhancement (EE) was evaluated during the arterial phase (2–30 seconds) and the parenchymal phase (1–5 minutes): the EE of pleural lesions was determined in comparison with splenic enhancement and classified in reduced EE versus marked EE. Results. All 13 patients with compression atelectasis had a short TE and a marked EE during arterial and parenchymal phases. In the remaining 17 patients with OA, 10 patients had a short TE and 7 patients had a delayed TE. The EE during both phases was reduced in 5 patients and marked in 3. Nine of 17 patients with OA had different EE during arterial and parenchymal phases. Conclusions. Compression atelectasis is characterized by CES with a short TE and a marked EE, indicating patent pulmonary arterial vascularization. In patients with OA, a variable CES pattern is found. With regard to only the TE, a delayed TE implies OA. This indicates a shifting of pulmonary vascularization to bronchial arterial vascularization in these patients.