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Egyptian Journal of Ear, Nose, Throat and Allied Sciences
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Eissa, L., Shinkar, H., Kotb, H., Galal, A. (2024). Cholesteatoma Imaging by diffusion and 3D T2 heavily weighed sequences: Role of fused images in localizing the white pearl.. Egyptian Journal of Ear, Nose, Throat and Allied Sciences, (), -. doi: 10.21608/ejentas.2024.314646.1778
Lamya Abdel galil Eissa; Hager Shinkar; Hesham Kotb; Ahmed Hesham Moustafa Galal. "Cholesteatoma Imaging by diffusion and 3D T2 heavily weighed sequences: Role of fused images in localizing the white pearl.". Egyptian Journal of Ear, Nose, Throat and Allied Sciences, , , 2024, -. doi: 10.21608/ejentas.2024.314646.1778
Eissa, L., Shinkar, H., Kotb, H., Galal, A. (2024). 'Cholesteatoma Imaging by diffusion and 3D T2 heavily weighed sequences: Role of fused images in localizing the white pearl.', Egyptian Journal of Ear, Nose, Throat and Allied Sciences, (), pp. -. doi: 10.21608/ejentas.2024.314646.1778
Eissa, L., Shinkar, H., Kotb, H., Galal, A. Cholesteatoma Imaging by diffusion and 3D T2 heavily weighed sequences: Role of fused images in localizing the white pearl.. Egyptian Journal of Ear, Nose, Throat and Allied Sciences, 2024; (): -. doi: 10.21608/ejentas.2024.314646.1778

Cholesteatoma Imaging by diffusion and 3D T2 heavily weighed sequences: Role of fused images in localizing the white pearl.

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 07 November 2024  XML
Document Type: Original Article
DOI: 10.21608/ejentas.2024.314646.1778
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Authors
Lamya Abdel galil Eissa email 1; Hager Shinkar2; Hesham Kotb3; Ahmed Hesham Moustafa Galalorcid 4
1Alexandria faculty of medicine
2Alexndria Faculty of Medicine
3Alexandria Faculty of Medicine Radiology Department
4otorhinolaryngology department, faculty of medicine, Alexandria university, Egypt
Abstract
BACKGROUND The most popular and successful technique for diagnosing preoperative cholesteatomas is diffusion imaging. In spite of its limited capacity to distinguish anatomical features. In order to create thin-section cross-sectional imaging images, attempts were undertaken to merge diagnostic diffusion images with corresponding anatomical images.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: We studied MR images of 30 patients having CSOM. Imaging techniques included thin-section “Non-EPI” diffusion and “MRI-fluid-sensitive- cisternography”. The “Fused images” were then generated by dedicated software. A cholesteatomatous “white pearl” is ascribed a certain location of oto-mastoid cavity. Fused and non-fused images are compared by inter-observer agreement.

RESULTS: Cholesteatomas were most frequently seen in the "attic" section (60%) and the "mastoid cavity" (20%), then the "tympanic cavity; other than attic (10%), and finally the mastoid antrum (10%). When comparing fused images to non-fused images, all of the accuracy numbers were greater.


CONCLUSIONS: “In order to effectively delineate the cholesteatomas pearl, fused images—which are produced by over-riding thin-section non-echo-planar diffusion and heavily T2W 3D ultra-thin sequences—can replace other thick-section anatomical images, which are unable to override thin-section diffusion images and may overlook minute pearls.
Keywords
MRI; cholesteatoma; diffusion; fused-images
Main Subjects
Otolaryngology including ear, nose and throat diseases
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Article View: 160
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