Correlation between magnetic resonance imaging features of uterine fibroids and therapeutic effects of high-intensity focused ultrasound ablation

Cheng, Hailing and Wang, Chen and Tian, Jun (1969) Correlation between magnetic resonance imaging features of uterine fibroids and therapeutic effects of high-intensity focused ultrasound ablation. Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences, 31 (4). ISSN 1681-715X

[thumbnail of 7294-36648-1-PB.pdf] Text
7294-36648-1-PB.pdf - Published Version

Download (1MB)

Abstract

Objective: To explore the correlation between magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features of uterine fibroids (UFs) and therapeutic effects of high-intensity focused ultrasound ablation (HIFUA), and to provide evidence for UFs diagnosis with MRI in clinical practice.

Methods: Forty-three UFs patients who were treated in our hospital from April 2012 to June 2014 were selected, including 72 UFs (48 multiple and 24 single UFs). Transverse, sagittal and coronal MRI scanning was performed one week before and after HIFUA to record UF number, location, type (intramural fibroid, submucosal fibroid and subserosal fibroid), mean diameter, hemoperfusion state, volume and ablation rate. The patients were followed up in the postoperative 1st, 2nd and 3rd months.

Results: HIFUA exerted the best ablative effect on fibroids on the anterior uterine wall (F=26.763, P=0.036). Various types of fibroids were ablated significantly differently (F=3.406, P<0.05) by HIFUA that was most effective for ablating the subserosal ones. Having significantly different ablative effects on UFs with different radial line lengths (F=29.94, P<0.05), HIFUA ablated those with radial line lengths of 3-5 cm most effectively. For UFs with different T2WI signal intensities, HIFUA also functioned significantly differently (F=3.179, P=0. 03).

Conclusion: HIFUA exerted significantly different ablative effects on UFs with various MRI features. Therefore, these features were well correlated with the therapeutic effects of HIFUA, allowing MRI as a promising diagnostic protocol.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Grantha Library > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@granthalibrary.com
Date Deposited: 08 May 2023 07:29
Last Modified: 24 Sep 2024 11:15
URI: http://asian.universityeprint.com/id/eprint/834

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item