Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The Caroli disease is a very rare pathology that can be revealed early in childhood or in adulthood, whose diagnosis is based on Magnetic Resonance CholangioPancreatography, which shows the communication of these malformations with the rest of the biliary tree and allows to eliminate biliary stenosis. The radiologist has a central role in the diagnostic orientation between malformative intra-hepatic bile duct dilatation and obstructive benign or malignant intra-hepatic bile duct dilatation dilatation. However, imaging of Caroli disease is polymorphous and therefore subject to misinterpretation. The benefit of this research is to reduce diagnostic errors by highlighting imaging criteria specific to the Caroli disease
Full description
The Magnetic Resonance CholangioPancreatography will have been performed in all patients using different Magnetic Resonance Imaging systems (Gyroscan Intera, Philips Medical Systems, Best in the Netherlands, Magnetom Avanto, Siemens Medical Solutions, and Signa Hdxt, General Electric Medical Systems) with a free-breathing three-dimensional high-spatial-resolution Fast Spin Echo sequence and/or a breath-hold two-dimensional single-shot sequence. Magnetic Resonance CholangioPancreatography may also include a Fast Spin Echo weighted T2-weighted sequence with fat-spectral saturation, a T1-weighted breath-suppressed gradient echo pulse sequence and a chemical shift sequence in phase and opposite phase, in the axial plane, and a weighted three-dimensional T1 saturated fat sequence after intravenous administration of gadolinium chelate. Images will be analyzed in consensus by two abdominal radiologists on a Picture Archiving and Communication System station and compared with the pathological results.
Enrollment
Sex
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal