AI Article Synopsis

  • A study conducted at the Institute of Mother and Child in Warsaw involved 43 symptomatic pregnant women who underwent MRI during various stages of pregnancy to assess and diagnose potential issues.
  • The results revealed a mix of findings, including benign changes and significant diagnoses like multiple sclerosis and brain tumors, as well as various abdominal conditions, indicating MRI's utility in complex cases.
  • The study concluded that while ultrasound is commonly used, MRI is invaluable for evaluating uncertain cases or structures that can't be seen through ultrasound, making it the best imaging option for pregnant women.

Article Abstract

Background: Presentation of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings in pregnant women in the Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Institute of Mother and Child, Warsaw, Poland.

Material/methods: Forty-three symptomatic pregnant women underwent MRI between 9 and 33 weeks of gestation (mean of 23 weeks). Moreover, we included 2 pregnant women who underwent fetal MRI and had incidental abnormalities.

Results: In 9 cases, we excluded the suspected brain abnormalities. In 4 cases, we found unremarkable changes in the brain without clinical significance. One patient was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, one with cortical dysplasia, one with pineal hemorrhage and one with a brain tumor. On abdominal MRI, 2 patients had normal findings, one patient had colon cancer with a hepatic metastasis, one patient had a hepatic angioma, one patient had an extraadrenal pheochromocytoma, one patient had an abscess in the iliopsoas muscle, 9 patients had myomas, two patients had ovarian simple cysts, two endometrial cysts, three dermoid cysts, one patient had sacrococcygeal teratoma, one patient had a cystadenofibroma (partial borderline tumor), one patient had an androgenic ovarian tumor and two patients had hyperreactio luteinalis. One patient was diagnosed with transient osteoporosis of the hip and one with a stress fracture of the sacral bone.

Conclusions: Magnetic resonance imaging is the best imaging modality for pregnant women. Although ultrasonography is the method of choice, doubtful cases as well as structures that cannot be examined with ultrasonography can be non-invasively evaluated with MRI.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5406112PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/PJR.900071DOI Listing

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