Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine whether solitary pulmonary tuberculoma and malignant tumor can be differentiated on the basis of magnetic resonance (MR) signal intensity. Twenty-eight patients with solitary pulmonary lesions were prospectively studied with MR imaging: T1-weighted, enhanced T1-weighted, proton density-weighted, and T2-weighted spin echo images were obtained. The confirmation methods used were computed tomography (CT)-guided biopsy in seven patients with lung cancer and four patients with tuberculosis; surgery in ten patients with lung cancer and five patients with tuberculosis; and laboratory data in two patients with tuberculosis. Morphologic features and MR signal intensity were examined in detail. As the test for detection of tuberculoma, signal difference on T2-weighted images was carefully analyzed. The signal intensity ratio of the nodule to thoracic muscle signal intensity was measured. The signal intensities obtained from the lung cancers and tuberculomas were variable on pre-and post-enhanced T1-weighted images and proton density-weighted images. Masses were hypointense in 2 of 17 patients with lung cancer and in 9 of 11 patients with tuberculoma on T2-weighted images (sensitivity 82%, specificity 89%, accuracy 87%). The mean signal intensity ratios of the tuberculomas to muscle were significantly lower than those of malignant tumors on T1-weighted, enhanced T1-weighted, proton density-weighted, and T2-weighted images (P < 0.0001). After gadolinium-DTPA enhancement, 2 malignant tumors and 7 tuberculomas showed a marginal rim enhancement pattern, whereas 15 malignant tumors and 2 tuberculomas revealed a diffuse enhancement. The results of MR imaging were consistent with those of CT in 84% of the patients. MR imaging is a helpful adjunctive method in terms of differentiating a tuberculoma from a malignant tumor.
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