Fulcher AS, Turner MA, Capps
GW. MR cholangiography: technical advances and clinical applications.
Radiographics 1999 Jan-Feb;19(1):25-41;
Department of
Radiology, Medical College of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth
University, Richmond 23298-0615, USA.
Magnetic resonance (MR)
cholangiography is a fast, accurate, noninvasive alternative to
endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC) in the evaluation
of biliary tract disease. Technical improvements in imaging sequences
(eg, half-Fourier rapid acquisition with relaxation enhancement)
and use of phased-array coils allow high-quality imaging comparable
to that available with ERC. In choledocholithiasis, common bile
duct stones as small as 2 mm can be detected with MR cholangiography
and appear as low-signal-intensity foci within the high-signal-intensity
bile. MR cholangiography may help establish the diagnosis of malignant
obstruction and is useful in the evaluation of patients in whom
ERC was unsuccessful or incomplete. The role of MR cholangiography
in the evaluation of intrahepatic duct disease continues to evolve.
MR cholangiography plays a crucial role in evaluating postsurgical
biliary tract alterations and can be used to demonstrate a variety
of congenital anomalies of the biliary tract (eg, aberrant ducts,
choledochal cysts, pancreas divisum). In addition, intentional
or incidental imaging of the gallbladder with MR cholangiography
can be used to identify calculi or help determine the presence
and extent of neoplastic disease.
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