4.6 Review

Injectable facial fillers: imaging features, complications, and diagnostic pitfalls at MRI and PET CT

Journal

INSIGHTS INTO IMAGING
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 557-572

Publisher

SPRINGEROPEN
DOI: 10.1007/s13244-017-0575-0

Keywords

Injectable facial fillers; Hyaluronic acid; Silicone; MRI; PET-CT; Granuloma

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Injectable fillers are widely used for facial rejuvenation, correction of disabling volumetric fat loss in HIV-associated facial lipoatrophy, Romberg disease, and post-traumatic facial disfiguring. The purpose of this article is to acquaint the reader with the anatomy of facial fat compartments, as well as with the properties and key imaging features of commonly used facial fillers, filler-related complications, interpretation pitfalls, and dermatologic conditions mimicking filler-related complications. The distribution of facial fillers is characteristic and depends on the anatomy of the superficial fat compartments. Silicone has signature MRI features, calcium hydroxyapatite has characteristic calcifications, whereas other injectable fillers have overlapping imaging features. Most fillers (hyaluronic acid, collagen, and polyalkylimide-polyacrylamide hydrogels) have signal intensity patterns compatible with high water content. On PET-CT, most fillers show physiologic high FDG uptake, which should not be confoundedwith pathology. Abscess, cellulitis, non-inflammatory nodules, and foreignbody granulomas are the most common filler-related complications, and imaging can help in the differential diagnosis. Diffusion weighted imaging helps in detecting a malignant lesion masked by injected facial fillers. Awareness of imaging features of facial fillers and their complications helps to avoid misinterpretation of MRI, and PET-CTscans and facilitates therapeutic decisions in unclear clinical cases.

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