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Issue title: Selected Presentations held at the 33th Annual Conference of the German Society for Clinical Microcirculation and Hemorheology, Villingen-Schwenningen, Germany, 14-15 November, 2014
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Trottmann, M. | Marcon, J. | D'Anastasi, M. | Karl, A. | Stief, C.G. | Reiser, M. | Clevert, D.A.
Affiliations: Department of Urology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Hospital Munich-Grosshadern, Germany | Institute for Clinical Radiology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University Hospital Munich-Grosshadern, Germany
Note: [] Corresponding author: Dr. med. D.-A. Clevert, Institute of Clinical Radiology, Interdisciplinary Ultrasound Center, University of Munich – Grosshadern Campus, Marchioninistr. 15, 81377 Munich, Germany. Tel.: +49 89 44007 3620; Fax: +49 89 44007 8832; E-mail: Dirk.Clevert@med.uni-muenchen.de
Abstract: PURPOSE: Virtual touch tissue imaging quantification (VTIQ) is a newly developed technique for the sonographic quantification of tissue elasticity. It has been used in the assessment of breast lesions. The purpose of this study was to determine the diagnostic performance of VTIQ in indeterminate testicular lesions. METHODS: Twenty patients with known testicular pathology underwent conventional B-mode sonography with additional VTIQ of the testicular lesions using a Siemens Acuson S2000™ and S3000™ (Siemens Medical Solutions, Mountain View, CA, USA) system. Tissue mechanical properties were analysed in the VTIQ examination. The pathologic diagnosis was established after surgery or in the follow-up examination for suspected benign lesions. RESULTS: Over 36 months, 22 focal testicular lesions (median lesion size, 18 mm; range, 4–36 mm in 20 patients (median age, 43 years; range, 22–81 years) were examined. Lesions were hyperechoic (n = 1), hypoechoic (n = 14), isoechoic (n = 1), of mixed echogenicity (n = 3) or anechoic (n = 3). Histological examination showed one benign lesion (6.25%) with a mean size of 7 mm and 15 malignant lesions (93.75%) with a mean size of 20 mm. Mean shear wave velocity for normal testicular tissue was 1.17 m/s. No shear wave velocity could be measured in cystic lesions. The rest of the benign lesions showed a mean shear wave velocity of 2.37 m/s. The value of the shear wave velocity in germ cell tumours showed a mean shear wave velocity of 1.94 m/s and for seminoma it showed a mean shear wave velocity of 2.42 m/s. CONCLUSIONS: VTIQ is a reliable new method for measuring qualitative and quantitative stiffness of testicular lesions and tissue. The qualitative shear-wave elastography features were highly reproducible and showed good diagnostic performance in unclear testicular lesions. The VTIQ technique is also useful in assessing small testicular nodules and pseudolesions.
Keywords: Elastography, shear wave imaging, seminoma, germ cell tumour, testis
DOI: 10.3233/CH-141904
Journal: Clinical Hemorheology and Microcirculation, vol. 58, no. 1, pp. 195-209, 2014
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