Amir A. Borhani
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by Amir A. Borhani.
Radiographics | 2009
Amir A. Borhani; Keyanoosh Hosseinzadeh; Omar Almusa; Alessandro Furlan; Michael A. Nalesnik
Posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) are a heterogeneous group of diseases that represent uncommon complications of transplantation and can lead to significant morbidity and mortality. PTLD is most prevalent during the first year following transplantation and occurs most frequently in multiorgan transplant recipients, followed by bowel, heart-lung, and lung recipients. It may involve any of the organ systems, with disease manifestation and the anatomic pattern of organ involvement being highly dependent on the type of transplantation. The current classification system includes four subtypes that have different prognoses requiring different treatment strategies. Tissue sampling is necessary for diagnosis and further subcategorization. The majority of cases are characterized by B-cell proliferation and are related to infection from Epstein-Barr virus. Knowledge of the distribution and radiologic features of PTLD allows the radiologist to play a pivotal role in making an early diagnosis and in guiding biopsy.
American Journal of Roentgenology | 2008
Alessandro Furlan; James V. Ferris; Keyanoosh Hosseinzadeh; Amir A. Borhani
OBJECTIVE The purpose of this article is to review the epidemiology, multimodality imaging findings, differential diagnosis, pathologic staging, and current treatment options of gallbladder carcinoma. CONCLUSION Understanding the characteristic appearances of primary gallbladder carcinoma at multiple imaging modalities can facilitate diagnosis and enable more accurate staging for triage to extended resection or an alternate therapy.
Radiographics | 2015
Arich R. Reynolds; Alessandro Furlan; David T. Fetzer; Eizaburo Sasatomi; Amir A. Borhani; Matthew T. Heller; Mitchell E. Tublin
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the leading causes of cancer-related death worldwide. The macroscopic growth pattern of HCC is subdivided into three categories: nodular, massive, and infiltrative. Infiltrative HCC accounts for 7%-20% of HCC cases and is confirmed at pathologic analysis on the basis of the spread of minute tumor nodules throughout large regions of the liver. Infiltrative HCC may represent a diagnostic challenge because it is often difficult to distinguish from background changes in cirrhosis at imaging. Infiltrative HCC usually spreads over multiple hepatic segments, occupying an entire hepatic lobe or the entire liver, and it is frequently associated with portal vein tumor thrombosis. The tumor is usually ill defined at ultrasonography and shows minimal and inconsistent arterial enhancement and heterogeneous washout at contrast material-enhanced computed tomography and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. The tumor may be more visible among the surrounding liver parenchyma at diffusion-, T1-, and T2-weighted MR imaging. Several liver diseases can mimic the infiltrative appearance of this malignancy, including focal confluent fibrosis, hepatic fat deposition, hepatic microabscesses, intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma, and diffuse metastatic disease (pseudocirrhosis). The prognosis for patients with infiltrative HCC is poor because the tumor is often markedly advanced and associated with vascular invasion at presentation. Survival after surgical resection is decreased; thus, infiltrative HCC is a contraindication for resection and transplantation. Knowledge of the key tumor characteristics and imaging findings will help radiologists formulate a correct and timely diagnosis to improve patient management.
American Journal of Roentgenology | 2014
Amir A. Borhani; Amanda Wiant; Matthew T. Heller
OBJECTIVE The purpose of this article is to review the different cystic hepatic lesions, with an emphasis on the imaging features that help to differentiate them, and to propose a practical algorithm for approaching the diagnosis of these lesions. CONCLUSION The number and morphology of the lesions and determination of whether there is a solid component are key imaging features that are helpful for approaching the diagnosis of cystic hepatic lesions. Familiarity with these features and knowledge of the clinical associations will help the radiologist to establish a definitive diagnosis or provide a reasonable differential diagnosis.
Radiologic Clinics of North America | 2011
Biatta Sholosh; Amir A. Borhani
Technical advances in high-resolution ultrasound have brought ultrasound to the forefront of thyroid imaging. Despite the seeming similarity in the imaging appearance of diffuse thyroid diseases, the radiologist should be able to identify patients with diffuse thyroid abnormality, be aware of the spectrum of the imaging appearance of common thyroid conditions, suggest a clinically relevant differential diagnosis, and exclude nodular disease when present. This article presents an overview of recent developments in ultrasound and discusses techniques for performing a neck ultrasound. The clinical and imaging features of the most common diffuse diseases affecting the thyroid gland are reviewed.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Vikrant Rachakonda; Amir A. Borhani; Michael A. Dunn; Margaret Andrzejewski; Kelly Martin; Jaideep Behari
Background and Aims Malnutrition is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in cirrhosis. There is no consensus as to the optimal approach for identifying malnutrition in end-stage liver disease. The aim of this study was to measure biochemical, serologic, hormonal, radiographic, and anthropometric features in a cohort of hospitalized cirrhotic patients to characterize biomarkers for identification of malnutrition. Design In this prospective observational cohort study, 52 hospitalized cirrhotic patients were classified as malnourished (42.3%) or nourished (57.7%) based on mid-arm muscle circumference < 23 cm and dominant handgrip strength < 30 kg. Anthropometric measurements were obtained. Appetite was assessed using the Simplified Nutrition Appetite Questionnaire (SNAQ) score. Fasting levels of serum adipokines, cytokines, and hormones were determined using Luminex assays. Logistic regression analysis was used to determine features independently associated with malnutrition. Results Subjects with and without malnutrition differed in several key features of metabolic phenotype including wet and dry BMI, skeletal muscle index, visceral fat index and HOMA-IR. Serum leptin levels were lower and INR was higher in malnourished subjects. Serum leptin was significantly correlated with HOMA-IR, wet and dry BMI, mid-arm muscle circumference, skeletal muscle index, and visceral fat index. Logistic regression analysis revealed that INR and log-transformed leptin were independently associated with malnutrition. Conclusions Low serum leptin and elevated INR are associated with malnutrition in hospitalized patients with end-stage liver disease.
Radiology Case Reports | 2017
Andrew J. Degnan; Kenneth K. Lee; Marta Ida Minervini; Amir A. Borhani
We report a rare case of metastatic malignant solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) that presented with hypoglycemia because of insulin growth factor-2 production. Initial workup included computed tomography imaging that revealed a large, partially necrotic liver mass, a hypervascular pancreatic head lesion, and 2 renal lesions. Following hepatic resection, pancreatic head resection and nephrectomy, all these lesions demonstrated pathological findings that were consistent with SFT. The patient also had a history of an intracranial mass that had been previously resected and treated with gamma knife therapy at an outside institution, which was found to also be SFT. Six months after initial pancreatic head resection, the patient developed a new lesion involving the pancreatic tail that was found to represent recurrent metastatic SFT. This case emphasizes the highly aggressive nature of extrapleural SFT, while rare, and the role of imaging in follow-up for disease recurrence.
Abdominal Radiology | 2016
Federica Vernuccio; Amir A. Borhani; M Dioguardi Burgio; Massimo Midiri; Alessandro Furlan; Giuseppe Brancatelli
Abstract Despite advances in multimodality imaging of pancreas, there is still overlap between imaging findings of several pancreatic/peripancreatic disease processes. Pancreatic and peripancreatic non-neoplastic entities may mimic primary pancreatic neoplasms on ultrasound, CT, and MRI. On the other hand, primary pancreatic cancer may be overlooked on imaging because of technical and inherent factors. The purpose of this pictorial review is to describe and illustrate pancreatic imaging pitfalls and highlight the basic radiological features for proper differential diagnosis.
Clinical Radiology | 2017
Alessandro Furlan; O.N. Close; Amir A. Borhani; Y.H. Wu; Matthew T. Heller
AIM To perform an intra-individual comparison of the frequency of respiratory-motion artefacts on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in cirrhotic patients following injection of gadoxetate disodium and gadobenate dimeglumine. MATERIALS AND METHODS Ninety-five cirrhotic patients (61 men and 34 women, mean age 58 years) underwent liver MRI with intravenous administration of gadoxetate disodium and gadobenate dimeglumine at different times (interval between studies, 189±83 days). Three readers scored the severity of respiratory-motion artefacts on the three-dimensional (3D) gradient-echo (GRE) images acquired before and after contrast medium injection. McNemars test was used to assess the difference in frequency of new respiratory-motion artefacts and transient severe motion (TSM) artefacts between gadoxetate disodium and gadobenate dimeglumine MRI studies. The association between clinical and technical features and the occurrence of TSM on gadoxetate disodium MRI studies was investigated. RESULTS On arterial phase images, new respiratory-motion artefacts were present in 32/95 (34%) cases after injection of gadoxetate disodium, while only seen in 2/95 (2%) cases after injection of gadobenate dimeglumine (p<0.0001). TSM was present in 6/95 (6%) cases after injection of gadoxetate disodium, and in 0/95 (0%) case after injection of gadobenate dimeglumine. No clinical or technical features were associated with the occurrence of TSM. CONCLUSIONS In cirrhotic patients, respiratory-motion artefacts on arterial phase 3D GRE images are more frequently seen after injection of gadoxetate disodium than after injection of gadobenate dimeglumine.
Abdominal Imaging | 2015
Amir A. Borhani; Anil K. Dasyam; Georgios I. Papachristou; Alessandro Furlan; Omar Almusa; Kareem Abu-Elmagd; Guilherme Costa; Adam Slivka; Kyongtae T. Bae
Abstract Small bowel transplantation is a surgical technique reserved for patients with end-stage intestinal failure. Despite its inherent technical difficulties, it has emerged as the standard of care for these patients. This article reviews the background and different surgical techniques for this procedure and then fully describes the spectrum of imaging findings of pancreatic and biliary complications, which have a prevalence of up to 17%, after this procedure based on 23-year single-center experience. The pancreaticobiliary complications encountered in our experience and discussed in this article include: ampullary stenosis, biliary cast, choledocholithiasis, bile leak, recurrent cholangitis, acute pancreatitis, chronic pancreatitis, and pancreatic duct fistula. Familiarity with the broad spectrum of PB complications and their variable manifestations will help radiologists to accurately diagnose these complications which have relatively high morbidity and mortality in these immune-compromised patients.