AI Article Synopsis

  • Tracheal atresia leads to changes in the trachea and lungs that can be less severe if a high airway fistula is present.
  • The study evaluated fetal MR images to compare cases of tracheal atresia with and without a fistula, as well as healthy controls, focusing on airway obstruction and various anatomical measurements.
  • Results showed 100% accuracy in identifying tracheal atresia, with significant differences in certain ratios between affected and control groups, highlighting fetal MRI's effectiveness in diagnosing and assessing airway obstruction in these cases.

Article Abstract

Background: Tracheal atresia causes some secondary changes (dilated trachea, flattened/inverted diaphragm, hyperintense and hyperinflated lungs). They can be reduced if a high airway fistula is present.

Objective: This study evaluated fetal MR images of tracheal atresia and the secondary changes, focusing on the presence of a fistula.

Materials And Methods: We assessed fetal MR images of tracheal atresia without fistula (n=4, median 26 weeks), tracheal atresia with fistula (n=4, median 33 weeks) and controls (n=30, median 32 weeks). We evaluated airway obstruction using true-positive rate in tracheal atresia and false-positive rate in controls indicating they are likely normal variants. Tracheal diameter, craniocaudal-anteroposterior ratio of the right hemidiaphragm, lung-to-liver signal intensity ratio, and cardiothoracic ratio were compared among the three groups using the Kruskal-Wallis test followed by pairwise comparison using the Mann-Whitney U test.

Results: True-positive rate was 100% in tracheal atresia, while false-positive rate was 20% in controls. The Kruskal-Wallis test showed differences among groups in craniocaudal-anteroposterior ratio and cardiothoracic ratio (P<0.001) but not in tracheal diameter (P=0.256) or lung-to-liver signal intensity ratio (P=0.082). The pairwise comparison in craniocaudal-anteroposterior ratio and cardiothoracic ratio showed differences between controls and tracheal atresia without fistula (P<0.01) and with fistula (P<0.05).

Conclusion: Fetal MRI is useful for the diagnosis of tracheal atresia, and detection of airway obstruction is essential. Lower craniocaudal-anteroposterior ratio and cardiothoracic ratio might be reliable measures even if a fistula is present.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00247-021-05092-xDOI Listing

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