COMPARISON OF TWO FAT-SUPPRESSED MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING PULSE SEQUENCES TO STANDARD T2-WEIGHTED IMAGES FOR BRAIN PARENCHYMAL CONTRAST AND LESION DETECTION IN DOGS WITH INFLAMMATORY INTRACRANIAL DISEASE

被引:4
|
作者
Young, Benjamin D. [1 ]
Mankin, Joseph M. [2 ]
Griffin, John F. [1 ]
Fosgate, Geoffrey T. [3 ]
Fowler, Jennifer L. [4 ]
Levine, Jonathan M. [2 ]
机构
[1] Texas A&M Univ, Coll Vet Med & Biomed Sci, Dept Large Anim Clin Sci, College Stn, TX 77843 USA
[2] Texas A&M Univ, Coll Vet Med & Biomed Sci, Dept Small Anim Clin Sci, College Stn, TX 77843 USA
[3] Univ Pretoria, Dept Prod Anim Studies, ZA-0002 Onderstepoort, South Africa
[4] Oregon State Univ, Dept Clin Sci, Coll Vet Med, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA
关键词
brain; dog; fat suppression; imaging; MRI; INVERSION-RECOVERY; HIGH-FIELD; SPIN-ECHO; STIR SEQUENCE; CORD LESIONS; MR; TIME; ENHANCEMENT; FEATURES; SYSTEM;
D O I
10.1111/vru.12220
中图分类号
S85 [动物医学(兽医学)];
学科分类号
0906 ;
摘要
T2-weighted (T2w) sequences are commonly relied upon in magnetic resonance imaging protocols for the detection of brain lesions in dogs. Previously, the effect of fluid suppression via fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) has been compared to T2-weighting with mixed results. Short tau inversion recovery (STIR) has been reported to increase the detection of some CNS lesions in people. The purpose of the current study was to evaluate the effect of fat suppression on brain parenchymal contrast resolution and lesion detection in dogs. We compared three sequences: T2w images, STIR, and T2w FLAIR with chemical fat suppression (T2-FLAIR-FS) in dogs with meningoencephalitis. Dogs with meningoencephalitis and dogs with idiopathic epilepsy were retrospectively identified and anonymized. Evaluators recorded the presence or absence of lesions within 12 predetermined brain regions on randomized sequences, viewing and scoring each sequence individually. Additionally, signal-to-noise ratios, contrast-to-noise ratios, and relative contrast (RC) were measured in a reference population. Short tau inversion recovery sequences had the highest RC between gray and white matter. While descriptively more lesions were identified by evaluators on T2-FLAIR-FS images, there was no statistical difference in the relative sensitivity of lesion detection between the sequences. Nor was there a statistical difference in false lesion detection within our reference population. Short tau inversion recovery may be favored for enhanced anatomic contrast depiction in brain imaging. No benefit of the inclusion of a fat-suppressed T2-FLAIR sequence was found. (C) 2014 American College of Veterinary Radiology.
引用
收藏
页码:204 / 211
页数:8
相关论文
共 43 条
  • [21] Fast Spin-Echo Triple Echo Dixon: Initial Clinical Experience With a Novel Pulse Sequence for Simultaneous Fat-Suppressed and Nonfat-Suppressed T2-Weighted Spine Magnetic Resonance Imaging
    Low, Russell N.
    Austin, Matthew J.
    Ma, Jingfei
    JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 2011, 33 (02) : 390 - 400
  • [22] Endorectal magnetic resonance imaging of prostatic cancer:: comparison between fat-suppressed T2-weighted fast spin echo and three-dimensional dual-echo, steady-state sequences
    Ikonen, S
    Kärkkäinen, P
    Kivisaari, L
    Salo, JO
    Taari, K
    Vehmas, T
    Tervahartiala, P
    Rannikko, S
    EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY, 2001, 11 (02) : 236 - 241
  • [23] Endorectal magnetic resonance imaging of prostatic cancer: comparison between fat-suppressed T2-weighted fast spin echo and three-dimensional dual-echo, steady-state sequences
    S. Ikonen
    P. Kärkkäinen
    L. Kivisaari
    J. O. Salo
    K. Taari
    T. Vehmas
    P. Tervahartiala
    S. Rannikko
    European Radiology, 2001, 11 : 236 - 241
  • [24] Comparison of fluid-attenuated in-version recovery and T2-weighted magnetic resonance images in dogs and cats with suspected brain disease
    Benigni, L
    Lamb, CR
    VETERINARY RADIOLOGY & ULTRASOUND, 2005, 46 (04) : 287 - 292
  • [25] Magnetic resonance enteroclysis in patients with Crohn's disease: Fat saturated T2-weighted sequences for evaluation of inflammatory activity
    Grieser, Christian
    Denecke, Timm
    Steffen, Ingo G.
    Werner, Scarlett
    Kroencke, Thomas
    Guckelberger, Olaf
    Pape, Ulrich-Frank
    Meier, Johannes
    Thiel, Regina
    Kivelitz, Dietmar
    Sturm, Andreas
    Hamm, Bernd
    Roettgen, Rainer
    JOURNAL OF CROHNS & COLITIS, 2012, 6 (03): : 294 - 301
  • [26] Comparison of multi-phase contrast-enhanced T1-weighted volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination and fat-suppressed T2-weighted combined with diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging in anal fistula evaluation
    Tao, Qinglin
    Tang, Yibing
    Luo, Yongchao
    Li, Dade
    Lu, Renai
    Zheng, Zhiming
    Chen, Ming
    Li, Deli
    QUANTITATIVE IMAGING IN MEDICINE AND SURGERY, 2024, 14 (12) : 8629 - 8643
  • [27] Comparison between contrast-enhanced fat-suppressed 3D FLAIR brain MR images and T2-weighted orbital MR images at 3 Tesla for the diagnosis of acute optic neuritis
    Manasse, Sharmiladevi
    Koskas, Patricia
    Savatovsky, Julien
    Deschamps, Romain
    Vignal-Clermont, Catherine
    de la Motte, Marine Boudot
    Papeix, Caroline
    Trunet, Stephanie
    Lecler, Augustin
    DIAGNOSTIC AND INTERVENTIONAL IMAGING, 2024, 105 (12) : 481 - 488
  • [28] FOCAL LIVER-DISEASE - COMPARISON OF DYNAMIC CONTRAST-ENHANCED CT AND T2-WEIGHTED FAT-SUPPRESSED, FLASH, AND DYNAMIC GADOLINIUM-ENHANCED MR IMAGING AT 1.5T
    SEMELKA, RC
    SHOENUT, JP
    KROEKER, MA
    GREENBERG, HM
    SIMM, FC
    MINUK, GY
    KROEKER, RM
    MICFLIKIER, AB
    RADIOLOGY, 1992, 184 (03) : 687 - 694
  • [29] MR imaging of osteomyelitis: Comparison of T1-weighted, T2-weighted, STIR, and contrast-enhanced-fat-suppressed T1-weighted images in evaluating primary and secondary findings
    Schnarkowski, P
    Matzko, M
    Lienemann, AH
    Staebler, A
    Lob, G
    Reiser, MF
    RADIOLOGY, 1997, 205 : 1698 - 1698
  • [30] Texture Analysis of Fat-Suppressed T2-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Use of Machine Learning to Discriminate Nasal and Paranasal Sinus Small Round Malignant Cell Tumors
    Chen, Chen
    Qin, Yuhui
    Cheng, Junying
    Gao, Fabao
    Zhou, Xiaoyue
    FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY, 2021, 11