scholarly journals Perbedaan Sonopattern Ultrasonografi Kandung Empedu pada Kasus Cholelithiasis & Galbladder Polyp

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 116
Author(s):  
Fiddinillah Fiddinillah ◽  
Sriyatun Sriyatun ◽  
Nurbaiti Nurbaiti ◽  
Nursama Heru Apriantoro

On ultrasound examination of the gallbladder Cholelithiasis and Gallbladder Polyp usually have similar results but have their own characteristics that can differentiate. In the image results Cholelithiasis, which is usually called gallstones, has a characteristic Sonopattern Hyperechoic with an Acousstic Shadow behind it, where when using the technique the patient's position changes the stone according to the direction of Earth's gravity. While the results of the Gallbladder Polyp image, which is a tumor protrusion attached to the gallbladder wall, has the characteristic Sonopattern Hyperecoic without an acoustic shadow behind it, where when using the technique the patient's position changes not according to the direction of Earth's gravity. In both cases, the presence or absence of an acoustic shadow behind it is based on the density of the tissue that the sound waves pass through from the ultrasound device, so that when passing through the stone, the acoustic shadow is more visible than when passing through the tumor tissue.. Keywords: sonopattern ultrasound; cholelithiasis; gallbladder polyp ABSTRAK Pada pemeriksaan USG kandung empedu Cholelithiasis dan Gallbladder Polyp biasanya memiliki hasil gambaran yang serupa tetapi memiliki ciri khasnya masing-masing yang dapat membedakan. Pada hasil gambaran Cholelithiasis yang biasa disebut batu empedu memiliki ciri khas Sonopattern Hyperechoic dengan Acousstic Shadow di belakangnya, ketika menggunakan teknik dengan posisi pasien yang berubah batu mengikuti arah gravitasi bumi. Sementara pada hasil gambaran Gallbladder Polyp yang merupakan tonjolan tumor yang menempel pada dinding kandung empedu memiliki ciri khas Sonopattern Hyperecoic tanpa Accoustic Shadow dibelakangnya, dimana ketika menggunakan teknik dengan posisi pasien yang berubah tidak mengikuti arah gravitasi bumi. Pada kedua kasus ini ada tidaknya Accoustic Shadow di belakangnya didasari oleh kepadatan jaringan yang dilalui oleh gelombang suara dari alat USG, sehingga saat melewati batu lebih tampak Accoustic Shadow dibandingkan saat melewati jaringan tumor. Kata kunci: sonopattern ultrasound; cholelithiasis; gallbladder polyp

Author(s):  
I. V. Dvoryakovsky ◽  
S. A. Ivleva

An overview of the data on features of ultrasound examination of the gallbladder with various forms of pathology in children is presented. We examined 650 conditionally healthy children and 840 children with diseases of the abdominal cavity organs, cardiovascular system, and some infectious diseases. The diffuse thickening of the gallbladder wall was established to be the possible result of a wide range of pathological conditions, both of surgical and non-surgical origin. It is shown that sometimes it is necessary to conduct frequent dynamic studies, especially in cases where the primary disease of the gallbladder cannot be ruled out. As a rule, the recognition of the cause of the response of the gallbladder wall and its exclusion as a result of appropriate treatment leads to a normalization of the morphology and function of the gallbladder.


2007 ◽  
Vol 100 (2) ◽  
pp. 321-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce J. Kimura ◽  
David J. Shaw ◽  
Donna L. Agan ◽  
Stan A. Amundson ◽  
Andrew C. Ping ◽  
...  

1914 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peyton Rous ◽  
James B. Murphy

A causative agent has been separated from three chicken tumors of very different sort, namely a spindle-celled sarcoma, an osteochondrosarcoma, and a spindle-celled sarcoma peculiarly fissured by blood sinuses. This was accomplished after the tumors had been transplanted repeatedly and their malignancy enhanced. Each of the tumor-producing agents is a distinct entity in that it gives rise only to growths of the precise kind from which it has been derived. All pass through Berkefeld cylinders impermeable at the same test to small bacteria, and two of the three retain their activity in tumor tissue that has been dried or glycerinated. All are strikingly dependent for their action on derangement of the tissue with which they are brought in contact. The general findings strongly suggest that the agents are of about the same size, and of the same natural class. It is perhaps not too much to say that their recognition points to the existence of a new group of entities which cause in chickens neoplasms of diverse character.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 480-481
Author(s):  
Herman Grossman ◽  
Alvin Felman ◽  
John A. Kirkpatrick ◽  
Charles H. Shopfner ◽  
Leonard E. Swischuk ◽  
...  

Ultrasound is the manifestation of a high frequency mechanical vibration. The sound waves produced are beyond the range of human hearing, i.e., 1 to 10 mHz. The sound waves travel through liquids and solids but cannot pass through air or vacuum. Ultrasonic energy is produced by a transducer, the power to which is supplied by a high-voltage pulsing circuit in an amplifier (ultrasonoscope). Ultrasonography has been used successfully in the examination of pediatric patients. One of the most common uses has been to measure shifts of the midline structures of the brain. By utilizing the standard echoencephalographic approach established for adults, and positioning the transducer above the ears in the temporoparietal regions, echoes are recorded from the midline structures. Ultrasonography is used as a preliminary study prior to more definitive procedures such as pneumoencephalography or arteriography, particularly in the presence of localizing signs. It has also been used to detect hydrocephalus and to follow changes in ventricular size which occur after ventricular shunting procedures. In fact, this is the easiest way to serially monitor the response to decompression. In many hospitals, ultrasonagraphy is considered to be the primary diagnostic study for the detection of pericardial effusion. Ultrasonic examination of the heart of pediatric patients with suspected congenital or acquired heart disease appears to be a promising new diagnostic technique. It has been successfully used to evaluate a number of abnormalities: great vessel transposition, cardiac chamber size and position, valve motion, and ventricular wall thickness. Extensive research is in progress to establish both normal values and patterns for differentiating various congenital abnormalities.


1988 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 137-138
Author(s):  
N. D. Hawass

Two patients presented with fever and acute abdominal pain. Acute cholecystitis was diagnosed when ultrasound examination showed a double-contour gallbladder wall. Radiography showed gas in the gallbladder wall in both cases, indicating emphysematous cholecystitis. This demonstrated that gas in the gallbladder wall may go undetected by ultrasound at the time when it could still be detected by conventional radiography of the abdomen. Awareness of the value of conventional radiography in these cases has an important diagnostic significance which may affect patient management.


2015 ◽  
Vol 40 (7) ◽  
pp. 2861-2866 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konrad Friedrich Stock ◽  
Bettina Klein ◽  
Dominik Steubl ◽  
Christian Lersch ◽  
Uwe Heemann ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Basem Ghayour ◽  
Jafar Khodagholizadeh ◽  
Christian Corda ◽  
Ming-Lei Tong ◽  
Ali Ghayour

A new experiment for gravitational waves (GWs) detection is proposed. It is shown that the effect of GWs on sound waves (SWs) in a fluid is that GWs vary the pressure of the fluid as they pass through it. This variation can be found by analysing the gauge of the local observer. It is shown that one can, in principle, detect GWs through the proposed new experiment. The variation of the pressure of the fluid, which represents detected signals, is indeed much higher than the corresponding values of GW amplitudes. The examples of rotating neutron stars (NSs) and relic GWs are discussed. Remarkably, a comparison of the proposed new method with a previous paper of Singh et al. (New J. Phys. 19, 073023 (2017). doi: 10.1088/1367-2630/aa78cb ) on a similar approach shows a possible improvement of the sensitivity concerning the potential detection of GWs. It must be emphasized that this proposed procedure may be difficult in practical experiments because of the presence of different types of noise. For this reason, a section of the paper is dedicated to the discussion of such noise. On the other hand, this paper must be considered as pioneering the new proposed approach. Thus, we hope that in future more precise studies of the noise that concerns the proposed new experiment will be done.


2003 ◽  
Vol 131 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 319-324 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miljko Pejic ◽  
Dragan Milic

INTRODUCTION Polypoid lesions of the gallbladder can be divided into benign and malignant categories. Malignant polypoid lesions include carcinomas of the gallbladder, which is the fifth most common malignancy of the gastrointestinal tract and the most common malignancy of the biliary tract. Benign polypoid lesions of the gallbladder are divided into true tumors and pseudotumors. Pseudotumors account for most of polypoid lesions of the gallbladder, and include polyps, hyperplasia, and other miscellaneous lesions. Adenomas are the most common benign neoplasms of the gallbladder. Cholesterol polyps are the most common pseudotumors of the gallbladder. The polyps can be single or multiple, usually less than 10 mm in size. They have no predilection for any particular gallbladder site, and usually are attached to the gallbladder wall by a delicate, narrow pedicle. No malignant potential has been identified for this type of pseudotumor. Adenomas are the most common benign neoplasms of the gallbladder. They have no predilection site in the gallbladder, and may also be associated with gallstones or cholecystitis. The premalignant nature of adenomas remains controversial. Ultrasonography (US) has been demonstrated to be significantly better in detecting polypoid lesions of the gallbladder as compared with computed tomography and cholecystography. A mass fixed to the gallbladder wall of normal thickness, without shadowing, is seen in case of gallbladder polyp. Since gallbladder cancers usually present as polypoid lesions, differentiation between benign polypoid lesion and malignant lesion can be very difficult, even with high-resolution imaging techniques. PATIENTS AND METHODS Retrospectively we have analyzed 38 patients with ultrasonographicaly detected gallbladder polyps during the period from January 1995 to December 2000, who were treated at surgical department of Health Centre in Uzice and at Surgical clinic of Clinical Centre in Nis. We have analyzed patients demographical data as well as their symptoms and radiographic findings. If the patient was operated, patohistological findings were analyzed also. RESULTS In our study 38 examined patients had mean age of 53.2 years (standard deviation of 12.8 years; range 26-80 years). The male-female ratio was 1:1. Overall 36 patients had symptoms that could be related to gallbladder diseases. Among these patients, 32 had pain in the upper-right quadrant of the abdomen that could be defined as biliar colic, and two had symptoms of acute cholecystitis. Among remaining four patients, two were examined because of the pain in the lower part of the abdomen. One patient had high temperature of unknown origin and the gallbladder polyp was detected accidentally during the ultrasonographic examination of the abdomen. Second patient had jaundice of unknown origin with ultrasound showing no significant changes in biliary tract. Preoperative ultrasound findings were inconsistent. The size of the lesion was marked only in 18 out of 38 patients. Among 34 operated patients, just 11 of them had patohistologicaly verified polipoid lesion. Patohistological analyzes of extirpated gallbladders showed one normal gallbladder, seven cholesterol polyps, one polipoid cholecystitis, and two real gallbladder neoplasms. One patient had gallbladder adenoma while the other had adenocarcinoma. Malignancy rate was 2.94% (one in 34). All patients with neoplastic polyps had solitary lesion larger than 1 cm in diameter, while the patients with non-neoplastic lesions had multiple lesions smaller than 1 cm in diameter. All operated patients, with the exception of one, had pathologically verified abnormal gallbladders. This results showed the presence of chronic cholecystitis even in the absence of the polyps. DISCUSSION Generally, no treatment is required in young patients with very small gallbladder polyps who are completely free from any symptoms. A patient with dyspeptic symptoms but no painful episodes consistent with biliary colic should be managed conservatively. Cholecystectomy is also indicated in patients with large gallbladder polyps sized over 10 mm irrespective of symptomatology. In patients with gallbladder polypoid lesions smaller than 10 mm, cholecystectomy is indicated only if complicating factors are present, e.g., age over 50 years and coexistence of gallstones. If the gallbladder polyp is smaller than 10 mm and complicating factors are absent, the "watch-and-wait" strategy seems to be recommendable. CONCLUSION Although gallbladder polyps are rare, they represent a significant health problem because they may be a precursor to gallbladder cancer. On the basis of the available data, and the results that we have gained in our study we suggest that gallbladder should be extirpated in cases when: 1. symptomatic lesions are present regardless of size; 2. polyps larger than 10 mm are present because they represent a risk for gallbladder cancer; 3. polyps are showing rapid increase in size. Polyps less than 10 mm that are incidentally identified and not removed should be assessed by ultrasonography at least every six months. This is especially critical for sessile polyps, in which the possibility of a small cancerous polyp is greater than in pedunculated polyps. Also, asymptomatic lesions less than 10 mm in diameter should be removed if patient is older than 50 years or if he has concomitant gallbladder calculosis.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pavlos Myrianthefs ◽  
Efimia Evodia ◽  
Ioanna Vlachou ◽  
Glykeria Petrocheilou ◽  
Alexandra Gavala ◽  
...  

Objective. We evaluated whether routine ultrasound examination may illustrate gallbladder abnormalities, including acute acalculous cholecystitis (AAC) in the intensive care unit (ICU).Patients and Methods. Ultrasound monitoring of the GB was performed by two blinded radiologists in mechanically ventilated patients irrespective of clinical and laboratory findings. We evaluated major (gallbladder wall thickening and edema, sonographic Murphy’s sign, pericholecystic fluid) and minor (gallbladder distention and sludge) ultrasound criteria.Measurements and Results. We included 53 patients (42 males; mean age57.6±2.8years; APACHE II score21.3±0.9; mean ICU stay35.9±4.8days). Twenty-five patients (47.2%) exhibited at least one abnormal imaging finding, while only six out of them had hepatic dysfunction. No correlation existed between liver biochemistry and ultrasound results in the total population. Three male patients (5.7%), on the grounds of unexplained sepsis, were diagnosed with AAC as incited by ultrasound, and surgical intervention was lifesaving. Patients who exhibited ≥2 ultrasound findings (30.2%) were managed successfully under the guidance of evolving ultrasound, clinical, and laboratory findings.Conclusions. Ultrasound gallbladder monitoring guided lifesaving surgical treatment in 3 cases of AAC; however, its routine application is questionable and still entails high levels of clinical suspicion.


1986 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 463-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Suramo ◽  
M. Pamilo

Ultrasound examination of foreign bodies most frequently encountered in the human body was performed when they were contained within a transmission medium acoustically resembling human soft tissues. All the foreign bodies evaluated (lead and plastic pellets, pieces of wire, nails, needles, small fragments of rock and glass, wooden slivers, surgical sponges and surgical threads) were detectable with ultrasound. Strong echoes were reflected from their surface when they were positioned favourably, although in some positions the echoes from a needle, fragment of glass, wooden sliver, or surgical thread could not be distinguished from those of the surroundings. Acoustic shadows were also seen behind the foreign bodies. A striking column of reverberation echoes was demonstrated behind lead pellets and nails while behind a glass plate there was an acoustic shadow that was often difficult to detect because it was concealed by a mirror image. With modern grey-scale real-time equipment it is possible to demonstrate objects from various angles, a fact which should facilitate the detection of foreign bodies in in vivo circumstances.


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