Non-invasive diagnosis of hepatic cirrhosis by transit-time analysis of an ultrasound contrast agent

T Albrecht*, MJK Blomley, DO Cosgrove, SD Taylor-Robinson, H Jayaram, R Eckersley, A Urbank, J Butler-Barnes, N Patel

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

230 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background Hepatic cirrhosis is accompanied by several haemodynamic changes including arterialisation of the liver, intrahepatic shunts, pulmonary arteriovenous shunts, and a hyperdynamic circulatory state. We postulated that the hepatic first pass of a bolus of an ultrasound contrast agent injected into a peripheral Vein is accelerated in patients with cirrhosis. We investigated this first pass in patients with diffuse liver disease and in normal controls to assess whether it provides useful differential diagnostic information. Methods We enrolled 15 patients with biopsy-proven cirrhosis, 12 patients with biopsy-proven non-cirrhotic diffuse liver disease, and 11 normal controls. We carried out continuous spectral doppler ultrasonography of a hepatic vein from 20 s before to 3 min after a peripheral intravenous bolus injection of 2.5 g Levovist. The intensity of the doppler signal was measured and used to plot time-intensity curves. Findings Patients with cirrhosis showed a much earlier onset of enhancement (arrival time; mean 18.3 s) and peak enhancement (mean 55.5 s) than controls (49.8 s and 97.5 s) or patients with non-cirrhotic diffuse liver disease (35.8 s and 79.7 s). All patients with cirrhosis had an arrival time of the bolus of less than 24 s, whereas the arrival time was 24 s or more in 22 of the 23 other participants. Peak enhancement was higher in patients with cirrhosis (mean 48.7 units) than in the other two groups (12.5 and 12.3 units, respectively). We found highly significant differences between the patients with cirrhosis and each of the other two groups for all variables (p

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1579-1583
Number of pages5
JournalThe Lancet
Volume353
Issue number9164
Publication statusPublished - 8 May 1999

Keywords

  • LIVER-DISEASE
  • BLOOD-FLOW
  • US
  • ULTRASONOGRAPHY
  • EXPERIENCE

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