Home
About Us
Issues
Authors
Reviewers
Users
Subscription
Our Other Journals
Site map
Aims and Scope
Salient Features
Editorial Board
Editorial Statements
Editorial-PeerReview Process
Publication Ethics & Malpractice
Ijars Performance
Journal Policy
Contact Us
Current Issue
Forthcoming
Article Archive
Access Statistics
Simple Search
Advanced Search
Submit an Article
Instructions
Assistance
Publication Fee
Paid Services
Apply As Reviewer
Acknowledgment
Register Here Edit Register
Register For Article Submission
Login Here Logout
Login For Article Submission
Annual
Buy One Issue
Payment Options
How to Order
JCDR
IJNMR
NJLM

 

Welcome : Guest

Users Online :

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Original article / research

Year :2016 Month : September-October Volume : 5 Issue : 4 Page : -

Role of Color Doppler Ultrasound in Predicting Malignancy in Cervical Lymph Nodes

Correspondence Address :
Kanika Gupta, Tushar Chandra, Bhuvaneswari Venkatesan, Payal Tripathi,
Dr. Kanika Gupta,
Room no. 13, Department of Radiodiagnosis,
ESIC Hospital PGIMER, K K Nagar,
Chennai-600078, Tamil Nadu, India.
E-mail: hikanika@gmail.com
Introduction: Introduction: Cervical lymphadenopathy is a common finding in clinical practice. There are various causes, which can be broadly divided into benign and malignant. Ultrasound with color Doppler is a safe, non-invasive and widely available tool for detection and characterization of cervical lymph nodes. It can provide an insight into vascularity and flow pattern within a lymph node, thereby serving as a surrogate marker for vascular alterations seen with malignancy.

Aim: To evaluate the role of color Doppler ultrasound in predicting malignancy in cervical lymph nodes.

Materials and Methods: As a part of this prospective study, we performed ultrasound with color Doppler on 60 patients (34 males and 26 females). Inclusion criteria for the study was any patient with palpable abnormality in the neck who was detected to have cervical lymphadenopathy on ultrasound and color Doppler examination and subsequently had FNAC or excisional biopsy.

Results: Out of 98 lymph nodes evaluated in 60 patients, 30 lymph nodes in 22 patients demonstrated malignancy on pathology. Out of these 30 lymph nodes, 24 demonstrated peripheral or mixed vascularity. The Resistivity Index (RI) values in benign lymph nodes ranged from 0.40 to 0.82 with a mean of 0.60 + 0.10. RI values in malignant lymph nodes ranged from 0.56 to 0.88 with a mean of 0.74 + 0.08.

Conclusion: Color Doppler ultrasound plays an important adjunct role to ultrasound in differentiating benign from malignant lymph nodes. It adds to the diagnostic confidence of predicting malignancy in cervical lymph nodes. However, Color Doppler ultrasound can not replace histopathology for differentiation of benign and malignant cervical lymph nodes.
 
[ FULL TEXT ]   |   [ ]
 

Article Utilities

  • Readers Comments
  • Article in PDF
  • Citation Manager
  • Article Statistics
  • Link to PUBMED
  • Print this Article
  • Send to a Friend

Quick Links

REVIEWER
ACCESS STATISTICS
Home  |  About Us  |  Online First  |  Current Issue  |  Simple Search  |  Advance Search  |  Register  |  Login  |  Contact  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Use
Author Support  |  Submit Manuscript  |  IJARS Pre-Publishing  |  Reviewer  |  Articles Archive  |  Access Statistics
©INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ANATOMY RADIOLOGY & SURGERY (IJARS), ISSN : 2277-8543.
EDITORIAL OFFICE : 1/9, Roop Nagar, Delhi 11000. Phone : 01123848553

* This Journal is owned and run by medical professionals *