Adrenal Imaging

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Adrenal Gland 101 - Anatomy & Scan Slam

  • Anatomy: Retroperitoneal. Right: pyramidal/triangular. Left: crescentic/semilunar.
    • Outer Cortex (steroids), inner Medulla (catecholamines).
  • Imaging Essentials:
    • CT: Primary tool. Non-contrast (NCCT) for Hounsfield Unit (HU) density assessment.
    • MRI: Problem-solving. Chemical Shift Imaging (CSI) detects intracellular lipid in adenomas (signal drop on out-of-phase sequences).
    • USG: Useful in neonates; limited utility in adults. Adrenal Gland Anatomy on MRI

⭐ An adrenal mass with ≤ 10 HU on unenhanced CT strongly suggests a benign lipid-rich adenoma.## Adrenal Gland 101 - Anatomy & Scan Slam

  • Anatomy: Retroperitoneal. Right: pyramidal/triangular. Left: crescentic/semilunar.
    • Outer Cortex (steroids), inner Medulla (catecholamines).
  • Imaging Essentials:
    • CT: Primary tool. Non-contrast (NCCT) for Hounsfield Unit (HU) density assessment.
    • MRI: Problem-solving. Chemical Shift Imaging (CSI) detects intracellular lipid in adenomas (signal drop on out-of-phase sequences).
    • USG: Useful in neonates; limited utility in adults. (image)[c7343c32-63da-460f-bf96-e938ecb1d778]

⭐ An adrenal mass with ≤ 10 HU on unenhanced CT strongly suggests a benign lipid-rich adenoma.

Incidentaloma Insights - Spotting the Suspects

Adrenal mass >1 cm, found incidentally. Goal: Benign vs. Malignant/Functional.

  • Benign Adenoma (Lipid-Rich):
    • NCCT: Homogeneous, ≤10 HU.
    • CECT Washout: APW >60%, RPW >40%.
      • $ \text{APW} = \frac{(\text{PV} - \text{D})}{(\text{PV} - \text{U})} \times 100 $
      • $ \text{RPW} = \frac{(\text{PV} - \text{D})}{\text{PV}} \times 100 $ (U: Unenhanced, PV: Portal Venous, D: Delayed)
    • MRI (Chemical Shift): Signal drop on opposed-phase (intracellular lipid).
  • Suspicious Features (Malignancy/Pheochromocytoma - PCC):
    • Size >4 cm (↑ ACC risk).
    • NCCT: >20 HU (PCC/Mets often >30-40 HU).
    • Heterogeneous, irregular, necrosis, calcifications (coarse/central).
    • Poor washout. Invasion. Rapid growth.
    • PCC: T2 MRI "light bulb" sign.

⭐ In cancer patients, new adrenal mass = metastasis until proven otherwise.

Biochemical screen (PCC, Cushing's, Conn's) vital.

Adrenal Adenoma CT Washout Calculation

Benign Buddies - Common Adrenal Finds

  • Adrenal Adenoma: Most common benign adrenal tumor.

    • NCCT: Homogeneous, round/oval, attenuation ≤10 HU (lipid-rich).
    • Contrast CT Washout (15 min delay):
      • Absolute (APW): $((HU_{peak} - HU_{delayed}) / (HU_{peak} - HU_{unenhanced})) \times 100%$. Threshold: >60%.
      • Relative (RPW): $((HU_{peak} - HU_{delayed}) / HU_{peak}) \times 100%$. Threshold: >40%.
    • MRI: Signal drop on out-of-phase chemical shift imaging (intracellular lipid).
  • Adrenal Myelolipoma: Contains mature fat & hematopoietic tissue.

    • CT: Macroscopic fat (attenuation -30 to -100 HU). Often heterogeneous.
  • Adrenal Cysts: Typically simple; endothelial, pseudocysts, or epithelial.

    • CT/US: Well-defined, thin-walled, anechoic/water attenuation. No enhancement.
  • Adrenal Hemorrhage: Causes include trauma, stress, anticoagulation.

    • CT: Acute phase: hyperdense. Chronic phase: may become hypodense, cystic, or calcify.

⭐ On non-contrast CT, an adrenal mass with attenuation ≤10 HU is highly suggestive of a benign lipid-rich adenoma, a key differentiator from most malignant lesions or pheochromocytomas (which are typically >10 HU).

Malignant Mayhem & Mimics - Critical Adrenal Calls

  • Adrenocortical Carcinoma (ACC):
    • Typically large (>4-6 cm), irregular margins, heterogeneous.
    • Central necrosis, hemorrhage, calcifications common.
    • Risk of local invasion (e.g., kidney, liver), IVC thrombus.
    • CT: Poor absolute washout (<60%), relative washout (<40%).

    ⭐ ACCs are typically large (>4 cm, often >6 cm) at diagnosis, with heterogeneous enhancement and central necrosis/hemorrhage.

  • Metastases:
    • Most common adrenal malignancy; often bilateral.
    • Primaries: Lung, breast, kidney, melanoma, lymphoma.
    • Typically round/oval, variable enhancement; PET avid.
  • Pheochromocytoma (Malignant potential ~10-15%):
    • MRI: Classic T2 "lightbulb" sign (very hyperintense).
    • Avid, often heterogeneous enhancement; cystic changes common.
    • MIBG scan positive (SPECT/CT for localization).
    • 📌 Rule of 10s (simplified): 10% bilateral, 10% extra-adrenal, 10-15% malignant.
  • Adrenal Lymphoma (Primary):
    • Rare; often bilateral, diffuse enlargement, homogenous.
    • May encase vessels without significant compression. Adrenocortical Carcinoma on CT and MRI

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Adrenal adenomas: Typically <10 HU (unenhanced CT); signal drop on out-of-phase MRI; washout >60% (absolute).
  • Pheochromocytoma: "10% tumor"; classically T2 hyperintense ("light bulb sign") on MRI.
  • Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC): Large, heterogeneous, invasive, with necrosis, calcification, hemorrhage.
  • Adrenal metastases: Often bilateral; common primaries: lung, breast, melanoma, kidney.
  • Myelolipoma: Benign tumor with macroscopic fat (negative HU values on CT).
  • Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome: Bilateral adrenal hemorrhage, due to meningococcal sepsis.

Practice Questions: Adrenal Imaging

Test your understanding with these related questions

A patient presents with headaches, palpitations, hypertension, and urine VMA positivity. The biopsy findings are shown in the image. Which of the following statements is correct?

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Flashcards: Adrenal Imaging

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Renal cysts with multiple class II features, large hyperdense cysts (>3cm), or hyperdense cysts that are totally intrarenal, are classified as Bosniak class _____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Renal cysts with multiple class II features, large hyperdense cysts (>3cm), or hyperdense cysts that are totally intrarenal, are classified as Bosniak class _____

IIF

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