Sandbox adult CHD complications: Difference between revisions

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| Hepatobiliary contrast media useful in characterizing speci c liver tutors
| Hepatobiliary contrast media useful in characterizing speci c liver tutors
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| colspan="4" | '''CHD''' indicates congenital heart disease; '''CT''', computed tomography; '''eGFR''', estimated glomerular  ltration rate; '''HCC''', hepatocellular carcinoma; and MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
| colspan="4" | '''CHD''' indicates congenital heart disease; '''CT''', computed tomography; '''eGFR''', estimated glomerular  ltration rate; '''HCC''', hepatocellular carcinoma; and '''MRI''', magnetic resonance imaging.
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Revision as of 15:26, 5 November 2017


Template:Adult CHD complications - 2017 Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1],Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Arzu Kalayci, M.D. [2]

==AHA SCIENTIFIC STATEMENT - 2017== AHA

Diagnosis and Management of Noncardiac Complications in Adults With Congenital Heart Disease

Advantages and Disadvantages of Imaging Modalities for Detection of Liver Disease and Screening for HCC in Patients With Congenital Heart Disease(CHD)

Advantages Disadvantages Additional Notes
Ultrasound Inexpensive

Widely available Highly sensitive for differentiating cystic and solid lesions

No ionising radiation

Low sensitivity for detecting focal, solid liver lesions, particularly in the setting of diffuse disease

Often unable to detect lesions <1 cm in size Low specs city High operator dependency

Use of contrast agents may improve characterization of hepatic tutors

Useful for guiding liver parenchymal and some focal mass biopsies

Elastography may overestimate degree of brosis and may not be useful for screening in CHD

CT Best spatial resolution (submillimeter resolution) Exposure to ionizing radiation dose

Low sensitivity for detecting and characterizing lesions <1 cm in size Contrast contraindicated in renal failure

Diffuse liver disease and fatty in ltration limit sensitivity for lesion detection

CT-guided liver mass biopsy useful in cases when ultrasound visualization is poor
MRI High lesion-to-liver contrast

High spatial resolution Better lesion detection and characterization than CT

No ionising radiation Unenhanced MRI superior to unenhanced CT

Contrast relatively contraindicated in renal failure (eGFR <30 mL·min−1·1.73 m−2)

High cost Long scan time

Need for longer breath-holds Less widely available Unable to be used with many pacemakers and de brillators

Hepatobiliary contrast media useful in characterizing speci c liver tutors
CHD indicates congenital heart disease; CT, computed tomography; eGFR, estimated glomerular ltration rate; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; and MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.