[Magnetic resonance imaging in liver function analysis. Modern objective reality].
D E ArutyunyantsV V KhovrinT N GalyanA S KulichkinN S TarbaA V FilinA V MetelinPublished in: Khirurgiia (2021)
Chronic liver disease is a serious worldwide problem because its progression is accompanied by liver fibrosis and cirrhosis at the terminal stages. Primary diagnosis and dynamic assessment of liver fibrosis are essential to determine the prognosis of disease and optimal treatment strategy. Long-term world experience in the use of gadoxetic acid (primovist, eovist) for diagnosis of liver diseases confirms its hepatotropic properties. Thus, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in hepatobiliary phase of contrast enhancement is valuable for differential diagnosis of focal liver lesions and assessment of liver structure and fibrotic changes. This review is devoted to the most common methods of contrast-enhanced MRI for assessment of liver function and correlation between severity of diffuse structural liver changes and gadoxetic acid accumulation in liver parenchyma. There is no a single method for MRI-based analysis of liver function that is confirmed by active researches in this direction. It was found that liver biopsy can by unnecessary in some cases if contrast-enhanced MRI with gadoxetic acid is available. The advantage of gadoxetic acid is also elimination properties. Indeed, biliary excretion ensures T1-weighted MR-cholangiography for additional assessment of patency, function and anatomy of the bile ducts. However, there are still several questions in this area that necessitates further research.