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Purpose. Understand the role of routine MRI, MR Pancreatography, and Secretin stimulation MRI in evaluation of pancreatic pathologyReview normal anatomy and common variants as demonstrated by MRIDemonstrate the MRI characteristics of various pathological conditions with their clinical presentati
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1. Pancreatic MRIAn Electronic Atlas of Pancreatic Imaging Bonnie Garon, MD
Howard Youngworth, MD
Lusine Tumyan, MD
Miriam Romero, MD
Suzanne Palmer, MD
Keck School of Medicine
University of Southern California
2. Purpose Understand the role of routine MRI, MR Pancreatography, and Secretin stimulation MRI in evaluation of pancreatic pathology
Review normal anatomy and common variants as demonstrated by MRI
Demonstrate the MRI characteristics of various pathological conditions with their clinical presentations and correlative imaging
3. Pancreas arises from two diverticula of the primitive foregut
Ventral (anterior) bud –
develops into the hepatobiliary system
gives off a small bud from the bile duct close to the duodenum (ventral pancreatic bud) which eventually forms the uncinate process and inferior portion of the head of the pancreas
Dorsal (posterior) bud –
forms the body, tail and part of the head of the pancreas Pancreatic Embryology
4. Pancreatic Duct Main Pancreatic duct of Wirsung
Formed from distal portion of embryologic dorsal duct and ventral duct
Drains through major papilla
Maximum diameter 2-3 mm
Major drainage in 90%
Accessory Pancreatic Duct of Santorini
Proximal portion of embryologic dorsal duct
Drains through minor papilla
Present in 44%
CBD drains via major papilla in 100%
5. Pancreatic Divisum
6. Pancreatic Anatomy Located in the anterior pararenal space
Vascular landmarks
Splenic artery and vein
Superior mesenteric artery and vein
12-15 cm long
Vascular supply
Gastroduodenal artery, pancreatico-duodenal artery and splenic artery
Imaging Appearance
High T1 signal intensity and low T2 signal intensity, similar to liver
7. Advantages
Therapeutic and diagnostic procedure
Direct inspection of the papilla of Vater and ampullary tumors
ERCP can be superior in diagnosis of intraductal papillary mucinous tumors Disadvantages
Technically difficult with a failed cannulation rate of up to 11%
Invasive procedure with complication rate of 5-7 % and mortality rate of 0.2 %
Limited in evaluation of tumor extension
Cannot be performed in patients with pancreatico-enteric anastomosis Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography
8. Computerized Axial Tomography Advantages
More manageable in severely ill patients
Cost and availability relative to MRI and ERCP
High spatial resolution
Air and calcification are easily recognizable Disadvantages
Irradiation
Iodinated contrast media
9. Ultrasound Advantages
Noninvasive, portable, widely available and economical
Color doppler evaluation of peripancreatic vascular structures allows determination of tumor resectability Disadvantages
Operator and patient dependent
Enteric gas limits evaluation
10. MR Cholangiopancreaticography Advantages
Noninvasive alternative to diagnostic ERCP
Useful in proximal obstruction where ERCP is limited
May be performed in post operative patient
Improved tissue characterization when compared to CT
Disadvantages
Patient dependent
Artifacts may obscure areas of interest
Poor visualization of calcifications
Cost
11. Routine Pancreatic MRI Technique NPO
Phased-array surface coil
Breath held with ultra fast sequences
May be performed with or without MRCP sequences imaging IV Contrast
12. Routine Pancreatic MRI Technique
13. MRCP Technique Thick Slab
Heavily T2 weighted images
Stationary, slow flowing liquids high SI
Fat suppression to allow higher SNR and contrast noise ratio
Background tissue SI very low or absent
TR 3000, TE 1100
3D
Slab thickness 60-80 mm
Sat band over CSF
FOV large enough to prevent wrap around
Multiple planes of acquisition
Coronal and coronal oblique
Pin wheel around central axis
Acquisition time 2-3sec
14. NSF Prevention Calculate GFR in patients with high risk for renal insufficiency
Over age 65
Diabetes, Hypertension
Kidney disease, dialysis
Choice of contrast based on GFR
> 60 – Contrast agent of choice (Magnevist)
30-60 (moderate kidney impairment)
Should not exceed recommended dose of contrast, Multihance preferred at our institution
<30 (severe kidney impairment)
Use of contrast should be carefully considered
If contrast is absolutely necessary, must sign “MR contrast in Renal dysfunction/ Dialysis patient” consent
If on dialysis, must receive dialysis immediately after
15. Dynamic MR Pancreatography with Secretin Improves visualization of pancreatic ductal system
Improves the detection of:
Normal ducts, pancreatic divisum, ductal stricture, chronic pancreatitis associated with marked ductal dilatation
Mechanism of Secretin
Exogenous administration of secretin stimulates the secretion of fluid and bicarbonate by the exocrine pancreas
Manometric studies show an increase in duct pressure at 1 minute and return to basal pressure at 5 minutes
Increases fluid secretion by ductal cells and simultaneously increases sphincter of Oddi tone
16. Dynamic MR Pancreatography with Secretin Dosing and Technique
IV administration of 1 mL of secretin per 10 kg of body weight
Image before and repeat every 2 minutes for 16 minutes after administering secretin
Abnormal if duct remains greater than 1 mm above baseline after 6 minutes
FDA-Risks and Side effects
Some common side effects with secretin include:
Nausea, flushing, abdominal pain, vomiting
Secretin may cause an allergic reaction
A test dose of secretin should be given to check for an allergic reaction
17. Secretin Stimulation in a Normal Pancreatic Duct
18. Acute Pancreatitis Most common benign disease involving pancreas
Most common cause is choledocholithiasis and alcohol use
Temporary process with potential for restoration of normal anatomy
Complications include acute fluid collections, psuedocyst formation, pancreatic abscess and pancreatic necrosis
Imaging
Imaging used to detect cause or complications
Increased T2/Decreased T1 signal from edema
Normal MRI appearance is seen in 29% of patients with acute pancreatitis
20. Necrotizing Pancreatitis Complication of severe acute pancreatitis
Focal/diffuse area of nonviable pancreas
Tends to affect body/tail, spares head due to abundant vascular supply
Imaging
Areas of absent enhancement
Heterogeneous signal intensity
21. Chronic Pancreatitis Continued inflammatory disease of pancreas characterized by irreversible damage to anatomy and function
Mainly caused by alcohol abuse
Calcifying or Obstructive
Focal chronic pancreatitis is difficult to differentiate from adenocarcinoma due to similar imaging findings
Imaging
Loss of fat signal on fat suppressed images
Diminished contrast enhancement
Multifocal dilatation and stenosis of duct due to fibrosis
Focal areas of decreased signal on T1 and T2 images from calcifications
22. Dynamic Imaging of Chronic Pancreatitis Visualization of the minor duct and the side branches is significantly improved
Pitfalls
Pre-existing ductal strictures
Ducts greater than 5 mm prior to secretin administration
Negative predictive value increases from 84% to 98% using dynamic pancreatography
Study confidently shows that patients with suspected pancreatic disease did not have the disease, which may prevent the need for ERCP
23. Pancreatic Pathology: Cystic Fibrosis Autosomal recessive, 1 in 2000-2500 live births
Dysfunction of exocrine glands forming thick tenacious material
Multisystem disease that affects lungs, GI tract, liver, biliary tract, pancreas, and reproductive tract
Presentation
Steatorrhea, malabsorption
Pancreatitis
Diabetes Mellitus
Imaging
Diffuse pancreatic atrophy
Complete/Partial fatty replacement
Calcific chronic pancreatitis
Loss of lobular contour
24. Three imaging patterns
Enlarged, lobulated pancreas with complete fatty replacement
Atrophic pancreas with partial fatty replacement
Atrophic pancreas without fatty replacement Pancreatic Pathology: Cystic Fibrosis
25. Primary Hemochromatosis Autosomal recessive
Excessive absorption and parenchymal retention of dietary Fe that favors accumulation within non-RES organs
Clinical Manifestations
Cirrhosis, glucose intolerance, heart failure, abdominal pain, arthropathy, and skin discoloration
Complications
HCC, liver failure, cardiomyopathy, diabetes
Imaging
Decreased SI (DI) on T1 and T2 weighted images in pancreas and liver due to paramagnetic effect of iron
Changes most conspicuous on gradient echo imaging
Spleen and bone marrow spared
26. Secondary Hemochromatosis/Hemosiderosis Iron deposition due to iron overload and RES cell deposition
Pancreas does not contain RES cells and usually not effected
Estimated RES cell capacity = 10 gm, which corresponds with 40 units of blood
After RES cell saturated, parenchymal cell deposition will occur, causing decreased signal within the pancreas
27. Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma 5th leading cause of cancer deaths
Diabetes and smoking doubles the risk
Most frequent cause of malignant obstructive jaundice
New onset diabetes in 25 – 50%
Imaging
Tumor most visible on T1 post Gd
Enhances less than adjacent pancreatic tissue on arterial and portal venous phases
Delayed phase enhancement is variable due to desmoplastic reaction
28. Mucinous Cystadenoma 10% of pancreatic cysts, 1% pancreatic neoplasms
Low malignant potential, usually in pancreatic tail/body
Commonly asymptomatic, but may present with pain, anorexia
Treatment- surgical resection due to invariable transformation into cystadenocarcinoma
Imaging
Well demarcated hypovascular thick wall mass of 2-36 cm with high T2 SI and low T1 SI
Multi/unilocular large cysts with thin septa, usually less than 6 cysts. May contain peripheral calcifications
Nodules may indicate malignant transformation
29. Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Tumor Rare intraductal tumor originating from epithelial lining with large amounts of mucinous secretions
Recurrent episodes of dull pain/acute pancreatitis
Low grade malignancy with better prognosis than adenocarcinoma
Treatment- Whipple
30. Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Tumor Main Duct IPMT
Dilatation of main pancreatic duct, branch ducts and papilla
Pancreatic atrophy
Segmental
Cyst in body/tail with normal remaining pancreas
Cyst in pancreatic head with dilatation of duct
Branch Duct IPMT
Mainly in uncinate process
Severe pancreatic atrophy
Complications: seeding to main pancreatic duct resulting in main duct IPMT
31. Carcinoid Metastatic carcinoid to the pancreas is rare
MR imaging
low signal intensity on T1-weighted images
high signal intensity (HS) on T2-weighted due to complex cystic nature
32. Insulinoma Most common functioning islet cell tumor
Single benign adenoma 80 to 90%
No predilection for any part of the pancreas
70% less than 1.5 cm
Low signal intensity on fat-suppressed T1W1
Hyperintense on dynamic contrast enhanced
33. Insulinoma
34. Pancreatic Trauma Present with laceration in pancreas or hematoma
Due to blunt trauma (MVA) or due trauma in region like surgical intervention close to pancreas
35. Pancreatic Transplantation Used to manage certain cases of complicated type 1 diabetes mellitus
Susceptible to postoperative complications like arterial and venous thrombosis
Artery and venous supply usually anastomosed to iliac vessels
Imaging-hyperintense to adjacent organs on T1-fat suppressed images, avidly enhances
36. Pancreatic Arteriovenous Malformation
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