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Müllerian duct anomalies: MR imaging evaluation.
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1990
Year
Urogenital RadiologyHysteroscopyGynecological SurgeryMedical ImagingUnicornuate UterusDiagnosisGynecologyMüllerian Duct AnomaliesUterine AnomaliesSurgeryUterus DidelphysRadiologic ImagingMedicineRadiologyHealth Sciences
Twenty‑nine patients underwent MR imaging to classify uterine anomalies, with results cross‑checked against laparoscopy, hysterosalpingography, and other surgical studies. MR imaging accurately classified all anomalies, detected coincidental gynecologic disease in 34 % of patients, guided treatment in 24 % of prospectively referred cases, and distinguished septal tissue types and clarified adnexal lesions.
Twenty-nine patients underwent magnetic resonance (MR) imaging for investigation of müllerian duct anomalies (MDAs). The anomalies evaluated were uterine agenesis (n = 2), uterine hypoplasia (n = 5), unicornuate uterus (n = 5), uterus didelphys (n = 5), bicornuate uterus (n = 10), and septate uterus (n = 2). The MR imaging interpretation was correlated with results of laparotomy (n = 18), hysterosalpingography (HSG) (n = 5), laparoscopy (n = 2), hysteroscopy (n = 1), HSG and laparotomy (n = 2), and HSG and laparoscopy (n = 1). MR imaging enabled correct classification of the anomaly in each patient and identification of coincidental gynecologic disease in 10 patients (34%). MR imaging results influenced clinical treatment in six (24%) of 25 patients referred prospectively. Of particular value was the ability to characterize septal tissue (myometrium versus fibrous tissue), identify the patients in whom the septum of bicornuate uteri had both fibrous and myometrial components, and establish that suspected adnexal lesions were actually components of obstructed MDAs.