Inflammatory aortic aneurysms: characteristic appearance on magnetic resonance imaging
- PMID: 1499743
- DOI: 10.1016/s0950-821x(05)80287-7
Inflammatory aortic aneurysms: characteristic appearance on magnetic resonance imaging
Abstract
Ten to 15% of all aortic aneurysms show inflammatory change. They are characteristically covered on their anterior and lateral sides with thick white fibrous tissue. Peri-aortic fibrosis may spread into the retroperitoneum to encase and obstruct adjacent organs making operative treatment more difficult and increasing the operative morbidity and mortality. Fifteen patients with inflammatory aneurysms and 46 patients with simple non-inflammatory aneurysms were studied prospectively. Each patient underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) using a Picker Vista MR2055 scanner operating at 0.5 tesla. Each scan was reviewed by a radiologist (G.G.H.) preoperatively and a diagnosis of inflammatory or non-inflammatory aneurysm made. At operation, the diagnosis of aneurysm type was made on macroscopic features of inflammatory change, and confirmed histologically using previously published criteria. The radiological diagnosis was found to correspond to the surgical and pathological diagnosis in all cases. In cases of inflammatory aortic aneurysm the aneurysm wall appeared laminated on MRI scan, showing three or more bright, high-signal layers. These appearances of inflammatory change are characteristic, and were present in all 15 patients with such aneurysms. There were no false positives among those patients with simple aneurysms, and no false negatives. Operative specimens of aortic wall were taken from four patients with inflammatory aortic aneurysms and four patients with simple non-inflammatory aortic aneurysms, and subjected to MRI scanning. The characteristic banding appeared only in the inflammatory aneurysm wall samples. Magnetic resonance imaging is a highly sensitive investigative technique for the detection of inflammatory aneurysms, showing characteristic changes. These changes are also seen in in vitro scans of wall samples from inflammatory aneurysms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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