Abstract

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the appearance of infectious cholangitis on MRI. The MR images of 13 patients (9 women, 4 men; age range, 14–79 years) with clinically confirmed infectious cholangitis, who represent our complete 9.5 year experience with this entity, were retrospectively evaluated. All MR studies were performed at 1.5 T and included: in-phase and out-of-phase T1-weighted spoiled gradient echo (SGE), T2-weighted fat-suppressed echo train spin echo, single shot T2-weighted sequences, and serial postgadolinium T1-weighted SGE sequences without and with fat-suppression. The biliary ductal system was evaluated regarding presence of dilatation, stenosis, wall irregularities, wall thickening, and gadolinium enhancement of duct walls. The liver parenchyma was evaluated regarding focal signal abnormalities on precontrast and serial postgadolinium images. Biliary ductal dilatation was observed in 100% of patients. Mild to moderate thickening of bile duct walls combined with increased enhancement on postgadolinium images was observed in 92% of patients. The liver parenchyma showed periportal or wedge-shaped areas of hyperintense signal on T2-weighted images in 69% of patients. On T1-weighted images, 54% of patients showed areas of hypointense signal and 15% of patients showed wedge-shaped hyperintense areas. Areas with increased enhancement on immediate postgadolinium SGE were observed in 58% of patients, and in 42% of patients increased enhancement persisted on 2 min postgadolinium fat-suppressed images. Distinctive MRI findings on pre- and postgadolinium images are appreciated for infectious cholangitis.

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