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Magnetic Resonance Materials in Physics, Biology, and Medicine 2013-Jun

Magnetic resonance imaging in patients with granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener's) and subglottic stenosis.

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Thorsten Klink
Julia Holle
Martin Laudien
Frank Oliver Henes
Frank Moosig
Corinna Platzek
Gerhard Adam
Wolfgang-Ludwig Gross
Thorsten Alexander Bley

Palabras clave

Abstracto

OBJECTIVE

To evaluate the ability of MRI to detect subglottic stenosis and to differentiate between active and inactive subglottic inflammation in patients with granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA).

METHODS

MRI studies of the larynx of 18 GPA patients with suspected SGS were included. The MRI protocol included T1- and T2-weighted and STIR-sequences, dynamic contrast enhancement (DCE) and diffusion weighted imaging (DWI). Two independent observers reviewed the MR images. SGS were identified and quantified, inflammatory activity was assessed using edema imaging, DCE and DWI. Final MRI diagnoses were compared to the clinical, laryngoscopic and histopathologic results.

RESULTS

MRI confirmed SGS in all GPA patients with significant narrowing of the airway lumen and thickening of subglottic wall. Assessing the subglottic inflammatory activity, MRI showed a sensitivity of 87.5 % and a specificity of 60.0 %. Interrater agreement was κ = 0.769. Of the different MR technical approaches tested, edema imaging was most sensitive and specific. DWI led to significant differences in the apparent diffusion coefficient between active and inactive subglottic inflammation. No significant differences were found with DCE imaging.

CONCLUSIONS

MR imaging has shown the ability to detect and grade SGS in patients with GPA. It non-invasively assesses the status of inflammatory activity utilizing edema sensitive sequences and DWI.

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