MRE is used to measure the stiffness of liver tissue. This is done to detect scarring of the liver, called fibrosis, in people with known or suspected liver disease. Scarring increases the stiffness of liver tissue.
Often, people with liver fibrosis don't experience any symptoms. But untreated liver fibrosis may progress to cirrhosis, which is advanced fibrosis and scarring. Cirrhosis can be fatal. If diagnosed, liver fibrosis often can be treated to halt progression and sometimes to reverse the condition.
If you have liver fibrosis, MRE can help gauge the severity of your liver disease, guide treatment decisions and determine how well you are responding to treatment.
The traditional test for liver fibrosis uses a needle to extract a sample of liver tissue, called a biopsy. An MRE scan offers several advantages:
- It's noninvasive and generally safer and more comfortable than a biopsy.
- It assesses the entire liver, not just the portion of liver tissue that is biopsied or evaluated with other noninvasive tests.
- It can detect fibrosis at an earlier stage than can other imaging methods.
- It is effective in people who are obese.
- It can help predict the risk of certain liver complications, including fluid accumulation in the belly, known as ascites.