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The British Journal of Radiology, Vol 70, Issue 839 1122-1125, Copyright © 1997 by British Institute of Radiology


ARTICLES

Ultrasound diagnosis of metastatic melanoma of the gallbladder

BJ Holloway and DM King
Department of Clinical Imaging, Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London, UK.

The abdominal ultrasound examinations of 464 patients with malignant melanoma performed over a 3 year period were reviewed. 23 (5.2%) had soft tissue material attached to the gallbladder wall and projecting into the lumen. Four of these were polyps of less than 1 cm which were thought to be benign, while the remaining 19 had abnormalities likely to be metastatic melanoma. Upper abdominal ultrasound examinations are frequently requested for staging purposes in patients with thick high grade malignant melanoma or clinical suspicion of metastases. Ultrasound clearly identifies the gallbladder and biliary tree in the vast majority of patients and is generally regarded as the imaging modality of choice for suspected gallbladder pathology. As autopsy studies have confirmed the incidence of gallbladder metastases from malignant melanoma to be 15-20%, a careful review of the gallbladder is advocated when abdominal ultrasound examinations are performed on patients with malignant melanoma.





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