Abstract

Differentiation between inflammatory and malignant lymph nodes by ultrasound is difficult. Electrical impedance scanning (EIS) is a new diagnostic tool, so far used primarily for the identification of malignant breast lesions. Cancer cells have altered dielectric properties compared with normal cells, thereby distorting the local electrical field. The induced changes in capacitance and conductivity are measurable using EIS. We evaluated EIS in demonstrating the cause of lymph node enlargement. 51 lymph nodes that were suspicious for malignancy on ultrasound (32 patients, mean age 32 years), with a mean size of 18 mm x 12 mm x 10 mm, were examined. The following lymph node locations were included in the study: cervical, inframandibular, axillary, paraaortic and inguinal. EIS results were compared with histopathological and follow-up findings. 30/34 malignant lymph nodes were correctly detected using EIS, while 14/17 inflammatory or benign lymph nodes were correctly identified as benign by EIS; thus, there were 4/51 false negative and 3/51 false positive cases. The sensitivity was 88.2% and the specificity was 82.4%. Corresponding negative and positive predictive values were 77.8% and 90.9%, respectively. Results from this initial study suggest the potential usefulness of EIS as an adjunctive imaging modality in the differentiation of lymphadenopathy that is equivocal on ultrasound. The best accuracy was obtained in the cervical, axillary and inguinal regions. Owing to technical restrictions of the present system, examination of inframandibular and paraaortic lymph nodes should be limited to special cases.

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