AI Article Synopsis

  • * CT and MRI are commonly used for initial diagnosis, but contrast-enhanced sonography (CEUS) is highlighted as a cost-effective and efficient alternative, especially when performed by the treating physician for more accurate results.
  • * The article emphasizes the importance of qualified examiners in utilizing CEUS and provides a systematic overview of common liver lesions and their contrast patterns, suggesting CEUS should play a larger role in future diagnostics.

Article Abstract

Due to the trend towards increased use of imaging and rising awareness among high-risk patients, gastroenterologists and hepatologists are more frequently confronted with patients with focal liver lesions. In the differentiation of these lesions, CT and MRI have increasingly found their way into primary diagnostic steps in everyday clinical practice. Contrast-enhanced sonography, on the other hand, is a very effective and cost-efficient method for assessing focal liver lesions. The success of the method is not only based on the visualisation of microvascularisation in real time. If sonography is performed by the treating physician, he can use the exact knowledge of history and clinical findings to specifically adapt the examination procedure and to interpret the sonographic findings with greater accuracy ("clinical sonography"). At the same time, the method enables the practitioner to combine diagnostics and management decisions in his or her own hands. To achieve excellent results with contrast-enhanced sonography-as with any other imaging method-it is necessary that the examiner is sufficiently qualified.This article systematically presents the sonographic characteristics of the most common liver lesions and clearly shows their contrast patterns using videos (available via QR code). The article illustrates that CEUS could-and from the authors' point of view, should-have an even greater significance in the future.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11211032PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-2145-7461DOI Listing

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