MRI vs. High-Resolution CT Scanning: Evaluation of the Anterior Skull Base

While magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is no longer a tool of the future, its availability is limited. Most hospitals still use high-resolution computed tomography (CT) scanning as their major imaging modality. Although numerous articles point to the improved diagnostic uses of MRI—as compared to hi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Otolaryngology-head and neck surgery 1987-03, Vol.96 (3), p.260-267
Hauptverfasser: Levine, Paul A., Paling, Michael R., Back, William C., Cantrell, Robert W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:While magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is no longer a tool of the future, its availability is limited. Most hospitals still use high-resolution computed tomography (CT) scanning as their major imaging modality. Although numerous articles point to the improved diagnostic uses of MRI—as compared to high-resolution CT—a change from high-resolution CT scanning to MRI scanning throughout the United States would cost billions of dollars. We should, therefore, delineate those clinical situations in which magnetic resonance imaging is distinctly superior to high-resolution CT scanning. It is already an accepted fact that MRI provides improved imaging of the central nervous system, but, while recent articles maintain the superiority of MRI head and neck imaging, the advantages to the clinician are less clear. We present representative cases of large malignant tumors of the frontal, ethmoid, and sphenoid sinuses, in which the full extent of the disease which involved intracranial structures and the orbit was better defined on the MRI scan than it was on the high-resolution CT scan. Decisions concerning the involvement of the infratemporal fossa, the cavernous sinus, the optic chiasm, the pituitary, and the frontal lobes were more easily made when based upon magnetic resonance imaging, while the tumor involvement as evaluated by CT scanning was much less clear. Establishment of the problem regions of the head and neck—when magnetic resonance imaging is superior to high-resolution CT scanning—will assist in identification of the true need for this tool in the practice of the otolaryngologist—head and neck surgeon.
ISSN:0194-5998
1097-6817
DOI:10.1177/019459988709600306