Chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging for distinguishing minimal-fat renal angiomyolipoma from renal cell carcinoma: a meta-analysis
Published 2017 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging for distinguishing minimal-fat renal angiomyolipoma from renal cell carcinoma: a meta-analysis
Authors
Keywords
Renal cell carcinoma, Minimal-fat angiomyolipoma, Chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging, Chemical shift signal intensity index, Differentiation
Journal
EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 1854-1861
Publisher
Springer Nature
Online
2017-11-24
DOI
10.1007/s00330-017-5141-0
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Renal cell carcinoma: applicability of the apparent coefficient of the diffusion-weighted estimated by MRI for improving their differential diagnosis, histologic subtyping, and differentiation grade
- (2016) Yulian Mytsyk et al. INTERNATIONAL UROLOGY AND NEPHROLOGY
- Predictive Value of Chemical-Shift MRI in Distinguishing Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma From Non–Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma and Minimal-Fat Angiomyolipoma
- (2015) Kartik S. Jhaveri et al. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ROENTGENOLOGY
- Double-echo gradient chemical shift MR imaging fails to differentiate minimal fat renal angiomyolipomas from other homogeneous solid renal tumors
- (2015) R. Ferré et al. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY
- MRI evaluation of small (
- (2015) Nicola Schieda et al. EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY
- Sensitivity of chemical shift-encoded fat quantification to calibration of fat MR spectrum
- (2015) Xiaoke Wang et al. MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE
- Differentiation of Rebound and Lymphoid Thymic Hyperplasia from Anterior Mediastinal Tumors with Dual-Echo Chemical-Shift MR Imaging in Adulthood: Reliability of the Chemical-Shift Ratio and Signal Intensity Index
- (2015) Adriano M. Priola et al. RADIOLOGY
- Solid Renal Masses: What the Numbers Tell Us
- (2014) Stella K. Kang et al. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ROENTGENOLOGY
- In-Phase Signal Intensity Loss in Solid Renal Masses on Dual-Echo Gradient-Echo MRI: Association With Malignancy and Pathologic Classification
- (2014) David D. Childs et al. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ROENTGENOLOGY
- Accuracy of chemical shift MR imaging in diagnosing indeterminate bone marrow lesions in the pelvis: review of a single institution’s experience
- (2014) Chad A. Kohl et al. SKELETAL RADIOLOGY
- QUADAS-2: A Revised Tool for the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies
- (2013) Penny F. Whiting ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
- MR imaging of renal cortical tumours: qualitative and quantitative chemical shift imaging parameters
- (2013) Christoph A. Karlo et al. EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY
- Angiomyolipoma with Minimal Fat: Can It Be Differentiated from Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma by Using Standard MR Techniques?
- (2012) Nicole Hindman et al. RADIOLOGY
- Small (
- (2012) Kewalee Sasiwimonphan et al. RADIOLOGY
- Quantification of liver fat in mice: comparing dual-echo Dixon imaging, chemical shift imaging, and 1H-MR spectroscopy
- (2011) Xin-Gui Peng et al. JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH
- Angiomyolipoma with Minimal Fat on MDCT: Can Counts of Negative-Attenuation Pixels Aid Diagnosis?
- (2009) Claus Simpfendorfer et al. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ROENTGENOLOGY
- Recent advances in the systemic treatment of metastatic papillary renal cancer
- (2009) Simon Chowdhury et al. Expert Review of Anticancer Therapy
- Renal Cell Carcinoma: Dynamic Contrast-enhanced MR Imaging for Differentiation of Tumor Subtypes—Correlation with Pathologic Findings
- (2009) Maryellen R. M. Sun et al. RADIOLOGY
- MR Imaging of Renal Masses: Correlation with Findings at Surgery and Pathologic Analysis
- (2008) Ivan Pedrosa et al. RADIOGRAPHICS
- Pixel Distribution Analysis: Can It be Used to Distinguish Clear Cell Carcinomas from Angiomyolipomas with Minimal Fat?
- (2008) Onofrio A. Catalano et al. RADIOLOGY
Publish scientific posters with Peeref
Peeref publishes scientific posters from all research disciplines. Our Diamond Open Access policy means free access to content and no publication fees for authors.
Learn MoreBecome a Peeref-certified reviewer
The Peeref Institute provides free reviewer training that teaches the core competencies of the academic peer review process.
Get Started