TY - JOUR
T1 - Complications of liver transplantation
T2 - Multimodality imaging approach
AU - Caiado, Angela Hissae Motoyama
AU - Blasbalg, Roberto
AU - Marcelino, Antonio Sergio Zafred
AU - Pinho, Marco Da Cunha
AU - Chammas, Maria Cristina
AU - Leite, Claudia Da Costa
AU - Cerri, Giovanni Guido
AU - De Oliveira, André Cosme
AU - Bacchella, Telésforo
AU - Machado, Marcel Cerqueira César
PY - 2007/9/1
Y1 - 2007/9/1
N2 - Liver transplantation is currently an accepted first-line treatment for patients with end-stage acute or chronic liver disease, but postoperative complications may limit the long-term success of transplantation. The most common and most clinically significant complications are arterial and venous thrombosis and stenosis, biliary disorders, fluid collections, neoplasms, and graft rejection. Early diagnosis is crucial to the successful management of all these complications, and imaging plays an important role in the diagnosis of all but graft rejection. A multimodality approach including ultrasonography and cross-sectional imaging studies often is most effective for diagnosis. Each imaging modality has specific strengths and weaknesses, and the diagnostic usefulness of a modality depends mainly on the patient's characteristics, the clinical purpose of the imaging evaluation, and the expertise of imaging professionals.
AB - Liver transplantation is currently an accepted first-line treatment for patients with end-stage acute or chronic liver disease, but postoperative complications may limit the long-term success of transplantation. The most common and most clinically significant complications are arterial and venous thrombosis and stenosis, biliary disorders, fluid collections, neoplasms, and graft rejection. Early diagnosis is crucial to the successful management of all these complications, and imaging plays an important role in the diagnosis of all but graft rejection. A multimodality approach including ultrasonography and cross-sectional imaging studies often is most effective for diagnosis. Each imaging modality has specific strengths and weaknesses, and the diagnostic usefulness of a modality depends mainly on the patient's characteristics, the clinical purpose of the imaging evaluation, and the expertise of imaging professionals.
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U2 - 10.1148/rg.275065129
DO - 10.1148/rg.275065129
M3 - Review article
C2 - 17848699
AN - SCOPUS:34948845676
SN - 0271-5333
VL - 27
SP - 1401
EP - 1417
JO - Radiographics
JF - Radiographics
IS - 5
ER -