Value of Doppler Sonography in Assessing the Progression of Chronic Viral Hepatitis and in the Diagnosis and Grading of Cirrhosis

Objective The purpose of this study was to evaluate the value of Doppler sonography in assessing the progression of chronic viral hepatitis and in the diagnosis and grading of cirrhosis. Methods Abdominal sonographic and liver Doppler studies were performed in 3 groups: 36 patients with chronic vira...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of ultrasound in medicine 2005-03, Vol.24 (3), p.311-321
Hauptverfasser: Haktanir, Alpay, Cihan, Birsen Songul, Celenk, Cetin, Cihan, Sener
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective The purpose of this study was to evaluate the value of Doppler sonography in assessing the progression of chronic viral hepatitis and in the diagnosis and grading of cirrhosis. Methods Abdominal sonographic and liver Doppler studies were performed in 3 groups: 36 patients with chronic viral hepatitis, 63 patients with cirrhosis, and 30 control subjects with no evidence of liver disease. A series of Doppler indices of hepatic vascularity, including portal vein velocity, portal vein pulsatility score, flow volume of the portal vein, resistive and pulsatility indices of the hepatic artery, modified hepatic index, hepatic vascular index, waveform of the hepatic vein, and focal acceleration of flow, were measured and correlated with liver and spleen size, portal and splenic vein diameter, and presence of ascites and collateral vessels. These indices were compared across the 3 study groups and within the patient groups with respect to presence of inflammation, fibrosis, and steatosis, as determined by histologic evaluation. Results The most useful indices were portal vein velocity, the modified hepatic index, and nontriphasic flow in the hepatic vein, which were helpful in distinguishing patients from control subjects. Hepatic vascular and modified hepatic indices were useful for differential diagnosis of cirrhosis and chronic viral hepatitis. However, all measurements were limited in their ability to determine the severity of chronic hepatitis. Conclusions Doppler sonography is sensitive to hemodynamic alterations resulting from inflammation and fibrosis, and if sonography is the study of choice to follow the progression of hepatitis, it will not be adequate without Doppler imaging. Doppler sonography has high diagnostic accuracy in cirrhosis despite some false‐positive conditions. However, it has a limited role in clinical grading.
ISSN:0278-4297
1550-9613
DOI:10.7863/jum.2005.24.3.311