Performance of computed tomography and its reliability for the diagnosis of transmural gastrointestional necrosis in a setting of acute ingestion of predominantly strong acid substances in adults
Objectives: Computed tomography has become a critical component in evaluating adult patients with acute caustic ingestions and an alternative to endoscopy for detecting transmural gastrointestinal necrosis. This study assessed the performance and reliability of computed tomography findings of transm...
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th-mahidol.828472023-05-26T00:22:39Z Performance of computed tomography and its reliability for the diagnosis of transmural gastrointestional necrosis in a setting of acute ingestion of predominantly strong acid substances in adults Kaewlai R. Mahidol University Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics Objectives: Computed tomography has become a critical component in evaluating adult patients with acute caustic ingestions and an alternative to endoscopy for detecting transmural gastrointestinal necrosis. This study assessed the performance and reliability of computed tomography findings of transmural gastrointestinal necrosis, given that the presence of the disease potentially signifies the need for surgery. Methods: A retrospective database search was performed to identify consecutive adult patients with acute caustic ingestions who had computed tomography with endoscopy or surgery within 72 h of admission. Eight physicians reinterpreted computed tomography in two separate rounds. Diagnostic performance utilized eight rounds of radiologists' reinterpretations against reference endoscopic or surgical grades. Intra- and interobserver agreements were calculated. Results: Seventeen patients (mean age, 45.6 years; 9 men; 46 esophageal and 34 gastric segments; 16 ingested strong acid substances) met the inclusion criteria. Eight patients (10 esophageal and 13 gastric segments) had transmural gastrointestinal necrosis. The highly differentiating findings between those with and without transmural gastrointestinal necrosis were esophageal wall thickening (100% vs. 42%, P = 0.001; 100% sensitive), gastric abnormal wall enhancement and fat stranding (100% vs. 57%, P = 0.006; 100% sensitive), and gastric absent wall enhancement (46% vs. 5%, P = 0.007; 100% specific). The intra- and interobserver percentage agreements were 47–100%, and 54–100%, which increased to 53–100%, and 60–100%, respectively, when considering only radiologists’ reinterpretations. Conclusions: In a very small sample of adults who primarily ingested acid, contrast-enhanced computed tomography performed well when interpreted by a panel of radiologists. 2023-05-25T17:22:39Z 2023-05-25T17:22:39Z 2023-01-01 Article Clinical Toxicology (2023) 10.1080/15563650.2023.2184242 15569519 15563650 37010392 2-s2.0-85151683867 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/82847 SCOPUS |
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Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics Kaewlai R. Performance of computed tomography and its reliability for the diagnosis of transmural gastrointestional necrosis in a setting of acute ingestion of predominantly strong acid substances in adults |
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Objectives: Computed tomography has become a critical component in evaluating adult patients with acute caustic ingestions and an alternative to endoscopy for detecting transmural gastrointestinal necrosis. This study assessed the performance and reliability of computed tomography findings of transmural gastrointestinal necrosis, given that the presence of the disease potentially signifies the need for surgery. Methods: A retrospective database search was performed to identify consecutive adult patients with acute caustic ingestions who had computed tomography with endoscopy or surgery within 72 h of admission. Eight physicians reinterpreted computed tomography in two separate rounds. Diagnostic performance utilized eight rounds of radiologists' reinterpretations against reference endoscopic or surgical grades. Intra- and interobserver agreements were calculated. Results: Seventeen patients (mean age, 45.6 years; 9 men; 46 esophageal and 34 gastric segments; 16 ingested strong acid substances) met the inclusion criteria. Eight patients (10 esophageal and 13 gastric segments) had transmural gastrointestinal necrosis. The highly differentiating findings between those with and without transmural gastrointestinal necrosis were esophageal wall thickening (100% vs. 42%, P = 0.001; 100% sensitive), gastric abnormal wall enhancement and fat stranding (100% vs. 57%, P = 0.006; 100% sensitive), and gastric absent wall enhancement (46% vs. 5%, P = 0.007; 100% specific). The intra- and interobserver percentage agreements were 47–100%, and 54–100%, which increased to 53–100%, and 60–100%, respectively, when considering only radiologists’ reinterpretations. Conclusions: In a very small sample of adults who primarily ingested acid, contrast-enhanced computed tomography performed well when interpreted by a panel of radiologists. |
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Mahidol University |
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Mahidol University Kaewlai R. |
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Kaewlai R. |
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Kaewlai R. |
title |
Performance of computed tomography and its reliability for the diagnosis of transmural gastrointestional necrosis in a setting of acute ingestion of predominantly strong acid substances in adults |
title_short |
Performance of computed tomography and its reliability for the diagnosis of transmural gastrointestional necrosis in a setting of acute ingestion of predominantly strong acid substances in adults |
title_full |
Performance of computed tomography and its reliability for the diagnosis of transmural gastrointestional necrosis in a setting of acute ingestion of predominantly strong acid substances in adults |
title_fullStr |
Performance of computed tomography and its reliability for the diagnosis of transmural gastrointestional necrosis in a setting of acute ingestion of predominantly strong acid substances in adults |
title_full_unstemmed |
Performance of computed tomography and its reliability for the diagnosis of transmural gastrointestional necrosis in a setting of acute ingestion of predominantly strong acid substances in adults |
title_sort |
performance of computed tomography and its reliability for the diagnosis of transmural gastrointestional necrosis in a setting of acute ingestion of predominantly strong acid substances in adults |
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2023 |
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https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/82847 |
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1781414288821321728 |