Qi Li, Fang Nie, Dan Yang, Tiantian Dong, Ting Liu
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
Objectives: To explore the feasibility of contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) as a new tool for characterizing vascularization of primary peripheral lung cancer.
Methods: 315 consecutive patients with definite primary peripheral lung cancers underwent CEUS examination from November 2016 to March 2022. CEUS parameters including time to enhancement (TE), time to peak (TP), time to wash-out (TW), distribution of vessels (DV), extent of enhancement (EE) and homogeneity of enhancement (HE) were obtained.
Results: The lesions were grouped on the basis of TE which reflects tumor vascularization: early enhancement (pulmonary arterial vascularization) (n = 91) and delayed enhancement group (bronchial arterial vascularization) (n = 224). Overall, lung tumors commonly (71.1%) manifested a delayed enhancement which indicating blood supply originated from bronchial arteries, while an early enhancement was present in less than a third of the cases. Tumors with bronchial vascularization tended to show a delayed, reduced and heterogeneous enhancement. Correspondingly, it is characterized by a shorter TE, marked EE and a relatively infrequent occurrence of necrosis in tumors with pulmonary vascularization.
Conclusions: Providing micro-perfusion information, CEUS is a potentially imaging tool for evaluating blood supply in primary peripheral lung cancer.
期刊介绍:
Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, a peer-reviewed international scientific journal, serves as an aid to understanding the flow properties of blood and the relationship to normal and abnormal physiology. The rapidly expanding science of hemorheology concerns blood, its components and the blood vessels with which blood interacts. It includes perihemorheology, i.e., the rheology of fluid and structures in the perivascular and interstitial spaces as well as the lymphatic system. The clinical aspects include pathogenesis, symptomatology and diagnostic methods, and the fields of prophylaxis and therapy in all branches of medicine and surgery, pharmacology and drug research.
The endeavour of the Editors-in-Chief and publishers of Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation is to bring together contributions from those working in various fields related to blood flow all over the world. The editors of Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation are from those countries in Europe, Asia, Australia and America where appreciable work in clinical hemorheology and microcirculation is being carried out. Each editor takes responsibility to decide on the acceptance of a manuscript. He is required to have the manuscript appraised by two referees and may be one of them himself. The executive editorial office, to which the manuscripts have been submitted, is responsible for rapid handling of the reviewing process.
Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation accepts original papers, brief communications, mini-reports and letters to the Editors-in-Chief. Review articles, providing general views and new insights into related subjects, are regularly invited by the Editors-in-Chief. Proceedings of international and national conferences on clinical hemorheology (in original form or as abstracts) complete the range of editorial features.