-
How to help the radiologist to look for occult hernia in the MRI?
Hi,
Following up on my introductory thread:
https://www.herniatalk.com/12969-what-can-cause-lower-abdominal-pain-triggered-by-certain-physical-movementsThis study made by Dr Towfigh:
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamasurgery/fullarticle/1893806I’m currently at the MRI stage:
High clinical suspicion for inguinal hernia => Nondiagnostic examination (possible hidden hernia?) => Ultrasonography or CT => Negative => MRI
So I got an MRI scheduled on Saturday:
*MRI Abdomen with and without contrast
*MRI Pelvis with and without contrastIs MRI of the abdominal and pelvis should be enough to diagnose a hidden hernia? Because the study mentions groin pain, so I wonder if I also need a separate MRI of the groin or it’s already included in the MRI of the pelvis?
Study mentions that a hidden hernia can be missed by a CT scan:
https://cdn.jamanetwork.com/ama/content_public/journal/surg/930960/soi140032f1.png?Expires=2147483647&Signature=fLYlRcgoFhc4nuIuS6il8hd5KO5rG2XEwRntgwFm2yHVDVdXmzB8IGGqy~6~mxWx7G5urq6O~Ge5WBRRy2p8vcPinBowFpwGsfEfmVn8hf38Ct9L8~7HKK2OdMv2EIrxp9G~yoGLUbmsjECrcqqxGyp6whd8Nhjf1UVBrtbLelxzutTbEjhPAnb7dOXJSF-XpFx-31ovFUNZ8Pavk~hdQBTaV7lHnBa5WUpx8Ftq1gEZ~Fmn5mlL95WYeWKjwlxDsWycr0iAH7pIWd6lG9EDFKZS5~0Vh60YYC-ndvWg-GfiyYSbofV1CT5LQml3oID7Sq3ENM4CicVoVr3CW~CVrA__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAIE5G5CRDK6RD3PGA“Nondiagnostic Computed Tomography (CT)
Axial CT through the pelvis is nondiagnostic for an operatively confirmed right inguinal hernia.”
“Diagnostic Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
Axial (A), sagittal (B), and coronal (C) T2 half-Fourier acquisition single-shot turbo spin-echo (HASTE) MRI through the pelvis in the same patient reveals right inguinal hernia (arrowheads).”
So should I show the radiologist this study, and ask him to try to make a similar angle shot as described here: “Axial (A), sagittal (B), and coronal (C) T2 half-Fourier acquisition single-shot turbo spin-echo (HASTE) MRI through the pelvis in the same patient reveals right inguinal hernia (arrowheads).”?
Also, given that I didn’t have pain when I got the ultrasound and CT scan, because I was keeping the pain at bay by avoiding physical activities that trigger it, should I activate the pain like a day before (i.e. by doing some physical activity like playing table tennis), so that way, when I come to do the test, they will able to find the source to the my pain? Perhaps by seeing some indirect sack of fluids generated by the hernia that only the MRI could see?
I really want to find a diagnosis to my pain that I’ve been experiencing for the last 4 months, and I think that communication with the radiologist is very important, so any advice would be appreciated.
Thank you.
Sorry, there were no replies found.
Log in to reply.