Suburothelial and extrinsic lesions of the urinary bladder: radiologic and pathologic features with emphasis on MR imaging

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This review correlates radiologic and pathologic features of suburothelial and extrinsic urinary bladder lesions, highlighting MRI's role in diagnosing these often non-specific or occult pathologies.

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This paper reviews radiologic and pathologic features of suburothelial and extrinsic urinary bladder diseases, emphasizing MRI through radiologic–pathologic correlation and covering categories including mesenchymal tumors, reactive inflammatory lesions, urachal abnormalities, and extrinsic spread by hematogenous/peritoneal routes. It reports that these deeper-layer conditions often appear non-specific or may be occult on cystoscopy, and MRI is highlighted as integral for diagnosis, with characteristic signal/vascular patterns described for several tumor types and macroscopic fat supporting lipomatous lesions. Reactive lesions such as nephrogenic adenoma, cystitis cystica, and cystitis glandularis are discussed, including that a mass with internal cystic spaces with pelvic lipomatosis suggests cystitis glandularis, while urachal mucinous adenocarcinoma is described as presenting as a T2-hyperintense suburothelial/extrinsic mass centered at the bladder dome. The paper relates to endometriosis because it states that extrinsic bladder involvement can occur from peritoneal spread including endometriosis, while noting the broader context of other infectious and malignant causes.

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this article is to present a contemporary review of the imaging appearance of diseases which affect the deeper layers of the urinary bladder, including both suburothelial and extrinsic pathologies, using radiologic-pathologic correlation. CONCLUSION: Compared to the more common urothelial lesions, at cystoscopy, suburothelial and extrinsic diseases of the urinary bladder wall often have a non-specific appearance or may be occult. Cross-sectional imaging, in particular MRI, plays an integral role in diagnosis. Mesenchymal tumors have distinct imaging features on MRI. Leiomyomas are characteristically low signal intensity on T2-weighted (T2W) imaging and progressively enhance. Lipomas and lipomatous hypertrophy are diagnosed by the presence of macroscopic fat. Neurofibromas, hemangiomas, and paragangliomas are hyperintense on T2W sequences and hypervascular. Reactive lesions occur in the setting of chronic inflammation and include: nephrogenic adenoma, cystitis cystica, and cystitis glandularis. Imaging findings are commonly non-specific; however, a mass with internal cystic spaces in association with pelvic lipomatosis is suggestive of cystitis glandularis. Urachal anomalies may be complicated by infection or malignancy. Urachal mucinous adenocarcinoma has a poor prognosis and may present as a T2-hyperintense suburothelial/extrinsic mass centered in the bladder dome. Other diseases may extrinsically involve the urinary bladder by hematogenous and peritoneal spread, including infection, endometriosis, and malignancy. A familiarity with suburothelial and extrinsic pathologies of the urinary bladder is critical for the radiologist, who may be the first to suggest these diagnoses.
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Abstract

Objective The purpose of this article is to present a contemporary review of the imaging appearance of diseases which affect the deeper layers of the urinary bladder, including both suburothelial and extrinsic pathologies, using radiologic–pathologic correlation.

Conclusion

Compared to the more common urothelial lesions, at cystoscopy, suburothelial and extrinsic diseases of the urinary bladder wall often have a non-specific appearance or may be occult. Cross-sectional imaging, in particular MRI, plays an integral role in diagnosis. Mesenchymal tumors have distinct imaging features on MRI. Leiomyomas are characteristically low signal intensity on T2-weighted (T2W) imaging and progressively enhance. Lipomas and lipomatous hypertrophy are diagnosed by the presence of macroscopic fat. Neurofibromas, hemangiomas, and paragangliomas are hyperintense on T2W sequences and hypervascular. Reactive lesions occur in the setting of chronic inflammation and include: nephrogenic adenoma, cystitis cystica, and cystitis glandularis. Imaging findings are commonly non-specific; however, a mass with internal cystic spaces in association with pelvic lipomatosis is suggestive of cystitis glandularis. Urachal anomalies may be complicated by infection or malignancy. Urachal mucinous adenocarcinoma has a poor prognosis and may present as a T2-hyperintense suburothelial/extrinsic mass centered in the bladder dome. Other diseases may extrinsically involve the urinary bladder by hematogenous and peritoneal spread, including infection, endometriosis, and malignancy. A familiarity with suburothelial and extrinsic pathologies of the urinary bladder is critical for the radiologist, who may be the first to suggest these diagnoses. Similar content being viewed by others

References

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endometriosis

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Magnetic Resonance Imaging Urinary Bladder Urinary Bladder Neoplasms Humans Reproducibility of Results Urinary Bladder Urinary Bladder Neoplasms

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