MR enterography in pediatric inflammatory bowel disease: retrospective assessment of patient tolerance, image quality, and initial performance estimates

The purpose of this article was to evaluate image quality, oral contrast administration and bowel distention, side effects, and performance estimates of MR enterography in a large cohort of pediatric patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). A retrospective analysis of the pediatric IBD clinic...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of roentgenology (1976) 2012-09, Vol.199 (3), p.W367-W375
Hauptverfasser: Absah, Imad, Bruining, David H, Matsumoto, Jane M, Weisbrod, Adam J, Fletcher, Joel G, Fidler, Jeff L, Faubion, Jr, William A
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container_end_page W375
container_issue 3
container_start_page W367
container_title American journal of roentgenology (1976)
container_volume 199
creator Absah, Imad
Bruining, David H
Matsumoto, Jane M
Weisbrod, Adam J
Fletcher, Joel G
Fidler, Jeff L
Faubion, Jr, William A
description The purpose of this article was to evaluate image quality, oral contrast administration and bowel distention, side effects, and performance estimates of MR enterography in a large cohort of pediatric patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). A retrospective analysis of the pediatric IBD clinic database (2007-2010) was performed. Eighty-five MR enterography studies in 70 patients were performed without sedation. All pediatric patients with the potential diagnosis of IBD were included, with the exception of studies performed on patients with ileoanal pouch anatomy. The quantity of ingested oral contrast material and number of adverse events were recorded. Retrospectively, image quality (including motion artifact and bowel distention) and enteric inflammation were assessed. Correlation between radiographic findings and endoscopic findings was tested by the Fisher exact test. Eighty-five MR enterography studies were performed without sedation in 70 patients (mean age, 15.6 years; age range, 9-18 years) over 30 months. The mean image quality for unenhanced images was significantly higher than for contrast-enhanced images (4.7 vs 4.1, p < 0.0001), with unacceptable image quality occurring on both unenhanced and contrast-enhanced sequences in one patient. The amount of oral contrast material ingested correlated with patient age (p = 0.009), with acceptable bowel distention occurring in 93% (78/85). Two patients had nausea or emesis and one experienced a syncopal episode after MR enterography. Sensitivity and specificity of MR enterography for active disease of the terminal ileum, right colon, and left colon were 80% and 85.2%, 79.1% and 77.8%, and 90.3% and 63.6%, respectively. MR enterography is feasible in patients 9 years old and older without sedation. Acceptable image quality can be achieved in nearly all patients, but a small minority will have suboptimal bowel distention or minor adverse events. Oral contrast ingestion regimes can be based on patient age. Performance estimates in children parallel reports in adults.
doi_str_mv 10.2214/AJR.11.8363
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source American Roentgen Ray Society; MEDLINE; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Administration, Oral
Adolescent
Child
Contrast Media - administration & dosage
Crohn Disease - diagnosis
Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal
Female
Humans
Ileitis - diagnosis
Ileum - pathology
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases - diagnosis
Intestine, Small - pathology
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
title MR enterography in pediatric inflammatory bowel disease: retrospective assessment of patient tolerance, image quality, and initial performance estimates
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