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HEPATOBILIARY IMAGING

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HEPATOBILIARY IMAGING Presented by Yang Shiow-wen 11/26/2001 Hepatobiliary Imaging Hepatobiliary Imaging Performed with a variety of compounds that share the common ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HEPATOBILIARY IMAGING


1
HEPATOBILIARY IMAGING
  • Presented by
  • Yang Shiow-wen
  • 11/26/2001

2
Hepatobiliary Imaging
  • Evaluates hepatocellular function and patency of
    the biliary system
  • Tracing the production and flow of bile from the
    liver through the biliary system into the small
    intestine
  • Sequential images of the liver, biliary tree and
    gut are obtained
  • A "HIDA" scan or a "DISIDA" scan

3
Hepatobiliary Imaging
  • Performed with a variety of compounds that share
    the common imminodiacetate moiety

4
Structures of IDA derivates
  • Blue color A polar component (the diacetate)
  • Red A lipophilic component

5
IDA-chelated Tc-99m
  • A magnification of two imminodiacetate compounds
  • Polar components chelated a Tc-99m molecule

6
Pathways of IDA derivates
  • The lipophilic component binding to hepatocyte
    receptors for bilirubin
  • Transported through the same pathways as
    bilirubin, except for conjugation
  • Excretion decreased with increasing bilirubin
    levels

7
HIDA
  • HIDA
  • Little used today

8
DISIDA (Disofenin)
  • 85 extracted by the hepatocytes
  • Visualization of gallbladder and CBD when
    bilirubin gt 8 ng/dl

9
BRIDA (Mebrofenin)
  • 98 extracted by the hepatocytes (bilirubin lt1.5
    mg/dL)
  • Visualization of gallbladder and CBD when
    bilirubin gt 30 ng/dl
  • Higher hepatic extraction

10
BRIDA (Mebrofenin)
  • Rapid biliary to bowel transit time
  • Taken into consideration when evaluating acute
    cholecystitis
  • Mebrofenin may be preferred over Disofenin in
    suspected biliary atresia

11
Indications
  • Functional assessment of the hepatobiliary system
  • Integrity of the hepatobiliary tree
  • Evaluation of suspected acute cholecystitis
  • Evaluation of suspected chronic biliary tract
    disorders
  • Evaluation of common bile duct obstruction
  • Detection of bile extravasation
  • Evaluation of congenital abnormalities of the
    biliary tree

12
Contraindications
  • Hypersensitivity to
  • IDA derivative
  • Local anesthetics of the amide type
  • With disturbances of cardiac rhythm or conduction
  • Pregnancy Category C

13
Requirements for DISIDA Scan
  • Patient preparation fasted for 2-4 hours
  • Otherwise delayed or non-visualization
  • Fasted for gt 24 hrs or on TPN, a false-positive
    study may occur
  • Radiotracer
  • Adult
  • 1.5-5 mCi Tc-99m IDA compounds i.v.
  • 3 10 mCi for hyperbilirubinemia
  • Children
  • 0.05 0.2 mCi/kg
  • minimum of 0.3 0.5 mCi

14
Requirements for DISIDA Scan
  • Additional information
  • History of previous surgeries, especially biliary
    and gastrointestinal
  • Time of most recent meal
  • Current medications
  • esp. opioid compounds
  • Delaying the study for 4 hr after the last dose
  • Bilirubin and liver enzyme levels
  • Results of ultrasound

15
Requirements for DISIDA Scan
  • Gamma camera
  • A large field of view with a low energy all
    purpose or high resolution collimator
  • A smaller field of view with a diverging
    collimator

16
Requirements for DISIDA Scan
  • Serial anterior views for 60 minutes
  • Until activity is seen in both the gallbladder
    (patency of the cystic duct) and the small bowel
    (patency of the common bile duct)
  • Every 5 minutes for 30 minutes
  • Once at 45 minutes
  • Once at 1 hour
  • Right lateral views
  • At 30, 60 minutes
  • Oblique views
  • Separate gallbladder from small bowel activity
  • Delayed views
  • At 2 hours, 4 hours, 6 hours or 24 hours after
    injection
  • Severely ill patient, suspected CBD obstruction,
    suspected biliary atresia

17
Interventions
  • CCK (0.01-0.02 ug/kg)
  • Fasting for gt24-48 hours, or on TPN
  • Empty the gall bladder (low resistance to bile
    flow state)
  • Preferential gallbladder filling
  • Delayed biliary to bowel transit
  • Injection 30 min prior to the test
  • Administered slowly (3 5 min)
  • Prevent biliary spasm and abdominal cramps
  • Water (5-10 cc)
  • Distinguish transient duodenal activity from
    gallbladder

18
Interventions
  • Morphine sulfate (0.04-0.1 mg/kg)
  • When acute cholecystitis is suspected and the GB
    is not seen by 60 min
  • Radiotracer within the small intestine
  • Enhancing sphincter of Oddi tone
  • Increasing pressure within the CBD
  • Diverting bile away from the sphincter of Oddi
    into functionally obstructed sludge filled
    gallbladder

19
Interventions
  • Fatty meal stimulation
  • Gallbladder ejection fraction measurement
  • Phenobarbital
  • When biliary atresia is suspected
  • 5 mg/kg/day (orally) for 3 5 days prior to the
    study
  • Enhancing the biliary excretion of the radiotracer

20
Processing
  • Gallbladder ejection fraction (GBEF)
  • Using the immediate pre-CCK and the post-CCK data
  • Regions of interest (ROI) are drawn around the GB
    and adjacent liver (background)
  • Hepatic extraction fraction (HEF)
  • Index of hepatocellular function
  • Deconvolution analysis from ROI over the liver
    and heart

21
Normal Study
  • Immediate demonstration of hepatic parenchyma
  • Prompt clearance of the blood pool within the
    first 5 minutes
  • Biliary excretion should commence within 20
    minutes (5-10 min)
  • Biliary ducts would visualize followed the
    gallbladder
  • Gallbladder and small bowels are visualized
    within 1 hour

22
Acute Cholecystitis
  • The most common indication
  • S\S
  • Nausea, vomiting, fever
  • Right upper quadrant pain post-prandially
  • Mild to moderate leukocytosis
  • Abnormal liver function test
  • Pain radiates to the back (scapula)
  • Obstruction of cystic duct
  • By a gallstone
  • Inflammation, edema, gallbladder mucous, or a
    tumor (5)

23
Acute Cholecystitis
  • DISIDA scan
  • Sensitivity 95, specificity 93-96
  • Positive predictive value 92.1, negative
    predictive value 99
  • Adequate filling of the gallbladder
  • Acute cholecystitis is effectively excluded
  • Cystic duct obstruction
  • Failure to visualize the gallbladder up to 4 hours

24
Acute Cholecystitis
  • When acute cholecystitis is suspected and the
    gallbladder is not seen within 4060 min
  • 3 4 hr delayed images should be obtained
  • Rule out chronic cholecystitis
  • Premedication with CCK
  • Morphine augmentation

25
Acute Cholecystitis
  • Premedication with CCK
  • Same sensitivity and specificity
  • Disadvantages
  • Not differentiated chronic cholecystitis from
    normal
  • Nausea, vomiting, exacerbation of bladder pain
  • Missed acute cholecystitis exhibiting delayed
    gallbladder visualization
  • Without delayed views
  • Malrotaion, enterogastric reflux, masses
    displacing or inflammatory processes of the small
    bowel

26
Acute Cholecystitis
  • Ingestion of morphine sulfate
  • More accurately, less complication
  • Differential diagnosis for non-visualization of
    the gallbladder
  • Relaxation of the sphincter of Oddi
  • Imaging is usually continued for another 30 min
  • Contraindications
  • Absolute Respiratory depression in
    non-ventilated patients, morphine allergy
  • Relative acute pancreatitis

27
Acute Cholecystitis
  • The hallmark of acute cholecystitis (acalculous
    as well as calculous)
  • Persistent gallbladder non-visualization 30 min
    post-morphine or on the 3 4 hr delayed image
  • Rim sign
  • A band or rim of increased activity adjacent to
    gallbladder fossa
  • Associated with severe phlegmonous/gangrenous
    acute cholecystitis, a surgical emergency
  • Cystic duct obstruction, acute cholecystitis

28
Chronic Cholecystitis
  • Ultrasound is the primary modality of choice
  • S\S
  • Usually having gall stones
  • The cystic duct is not blocked
  • More chronic pain

29
Common Bile Duct Obstruction
  • Delayed visualization of the gall bladder
  • Clinical settings associated with physiologic
    failure of the gallbladder to filling
  • e.g. fasting for gt24 48 hr, severely ill or
    post-operative patients may result in GB
    non-visualization within the first hour
  • A larger dose of morphine (0.1 mg/kg) decrease
    the false positive rate
  • Separated from acute cholecystitis using morphine
    or delayed imaging
  • Reduced gallbladder ejection fraction in response
    to CCK
  • Indicative of chronic cholecystitis, gallbladder
    dyskinesia or the cystic duct syndrome
  • Visualization of the GB after the bowel

30
Common Bile Duct Obstruction
  • S\S
  • Hyperbilirubinemia (gt 5 mg/dl)
  • Dilation of CBD (sonography, gt3 days)
  • A history of pancreatitis (serum amylase)
  • DISIDA scan
  • High grade or a total CBD obstruction
  • Sensitivity 95
  • Detection immediately

31
Common Bile Duct Obstruction
  • Delayed biliary-to-bowel transit beyond 60 min
    raises the suspicion
  • Activity in the small bowel seen within 60 min
    does not entirely exclude partial CBD obstruction
  • When neither the gallbladder nor the small bowel
    are seen within 1824 hrs
  • Suspected High grade CBD obstruction
  • Severe hepatocellular dysfunction may appear
    similar

32
Bile Leaks
  • Most appropriate non-invasive imaging technique
    for evaluation of bile leaks
  • Sensitivity 87, Specificity 100 (2-3 ml of
    labeled bile)
  • Radiopharmaceutical activity
  • In an extrahepatic and extraluminal location
  • More intense with time
  • Differentiating intraluminal activity from a leak
  • Standing views in addition to decubitus views
  • Cinematic display
  • 3 4 hrs delayed imaging

33
Biliary Atresia
  • Excluded by demonstrating transit of radiotracer
    into the bowel
  • Failure of tracer to enter the gut
  • Hepatocellular disease
  • Immature intrahepatic transport mechanisms
  • Biliary atresia
  • CBD obstruction
  • Urinary excretion of the tracer (especially in
    diaper) may be confused with bowel activity

34
Duodenogastric Bile Reflux
  • Highly correlated with bile gastritis
  • Cause of epigastric discomfort

35
False Positive Study
  • Gallbladder non-visualization in the absence of
    acute cholecystitis
  • Insufficient fasting (lt2 4 hr)
  • Prolonged fasting (gt24 48 hr), especially total
    parenteral nutrition (despite CCK pre-treatment
    and Morphine augmentation)
  • Severe hepatocellular disease
  • High grade common bile duct obstruction
  • Severe intercurrent illness (despite CCK
    pre-treatment and Morphine augmentation)
  • Pancreatitis (rare)
  • Rapid biliary-to-bowel transit (insufficient
    tracer activity remaining in the liver for
    delayed imaging)
  • Severe chronic cholecystitis
  • Previous cholecystectomy

36
False Negative Study
  • Gallbladder visualization in the presence of
    acute cholecystitis
  • Bowel loop simulating gallbladder (drinking water
    may help to clarify anatomy)
  • Acute acalculous cholecystitis
  • The presence of the "dilated cystic duct" sign
    simulating GB. (Morphine should not be given)
  • Bile leak due to GB perforation
  • Congenital anomalies simulating gallbladder
  • Activity in the kidneys simulating gallbladder or
    small bowel (may be clarified by a lateral image)

37
Reflux into Stomach
38
Radioactivity in Left Subphrenic Space-I
39
Bile Leak Post-cholecystectomy-II
40
References
  • http//www.vh.org/Providers/Lectures/IROCH/Biliary
    Nucs/BiliaryNucs.html (Virtual Hospital)
  • http//www.cancerboard.ab.ca/about/ercdocs/diiso.h
    tml
  • http//www.nuclearonline.org/PI/Bracco20mebrofeni
    n20doc.pdf
  • http//www.snm.org/pdf/hb2.pdf
  • http//www.vh.org/Providers/Textbooks/ElectricGiNu
    cs/Text/Hepatobiliary.html
  • Chapter 38, Hepatobiliary Imaging, Darlene
    Fink-Bennett, P759-770

41
The End
  • Thank for Your Attention !
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