Abstract

BackgroundMulti-detector computed tomography (MDCT) represents the gold standard in patients with acute abdomen syndrome and suspected bowel ischemia. It provides a correct diagnosis and contributes to appropriate treatment planning. This study aims to evaluate the role of 3D Tissue Transition Projection (TTP) transparent wall CT reconstruction for detecting the degree of bowel dilatation and to correlate this finding with the aetiology and prognosis in patients affected by mesenteric infarction. Materials and methodsForty-seven patients affected by bowel infarction due to vascular obstruction (arterial in 66% of cases, venous in 34%) were assessed by MDCT examination searching for the degree of bowel dilatation (subdivided into 4 groups: entire small bowel (SB); ≥50% of SB; < 50% of SB; large bowel only). Two blinded radiologists evaluated TTP 3D transparent wall and multi-planar reconstructions. Chi square test was used to correlate CT findings with the disease course and the mortality rate. Cohen's kappa statistics was used in order to assess inter-observer agreement. ResultsThe overall mortality rate was 64%, with a 90% value for arterial forms and 10% in case of venous infarctions. The entire SB (n = 10) or a ≥50% SB dilatation (n = 16) correlated with poor prognosis in all cases (p < 0.05); a <50% SB dilatation (n = 16) correlated with good prognosis in 87.5% of cases (p < 0.05). A large bowel only dilatation (n = 5) did not show a significant prognostic value (p = 0.13). Almost perfect agreement between the two readers was found (k = 0.84). ConclusionMDCT offers different reconstruction software for diagnosing bowel ischemia. 3D TTP transparent wall reconstructions represent a rapid and automatic tool for identifying loop dilatation, which significantly correlates with an arterial aetiology and poor prognosis.

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