Magnetresonanztomographie benigner und maligner Tumoren des weiblichen Beckens

2004 
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is an accepted imaging method for diagnosing diseases of the female pelvis. This review article describes the role of MR imaging for the diagnosis of benign and malignant pelvic tumors. Sagittal T2-weighted fast spin echo sequences can be effectively applied to diagnose leiomyomas of the uterus and provide exact pretreatment measurements of size and localization. In the diagnostic work-up of endometrial carcinoma, fat-saturated, T1-weighted gradient echo sequences make it possible to determine precisely how deep myometrial infiltration extends and what tissue should be included in preoperative treatment planning. In cervical cancer staging, MRI permits both assessment of local tumor extent and determination of tumor volume for planning and monitoring radiotherapy. The usefulness of MRI in cervical cancer staging is, however, limited since not all early-stage cancer (FIGO stage IA and small stage IB tumors) can be detected. Hence, it appears that the use of MRI as a screening method for cervical cancer cannot be recommended. MRI can distinguish between benign and malignant ovarian tumors with high sensitivity and specificity. Standard and fat-saturated T1-weighted sequences usually can diagnose teratomas with a specificity of 100%. Axial fat-saturated, contrast enhanced T1-weighted spin echo sequences are useful in the staging of malignant ovarian tumors since they facilitate evaluation of their internal structure and will disclose peritoneal metastases. Besides staging of ovarian cancer, MRI can be applied for localization and for monitoring treatment response.
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