Functional renal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has seen a number of recent advances, and techniques are now available that can generate quantitative imaging biomarkers with the potential to improve the management of kidney disease. Such biomarkers are sensitive to changes in renal blood flow, tissue perfusion, oxygenation and microstructure (including inflammation and fibrosis), processes that are important in a range of renal diseases including chronic kidney disease. However, several challenges remain to move these techniques towards clinical adoption, from technical validation through biological and clinical validation, to demonstration of cost-effectiveness and regulatory qualification. To address these challenges, the European Cooperation in Science and Technology Action PARENCHIMA was initiated in early 2017. PARENCHIMA is a multidisciplinary pan-European network with an overarching aim of eliminating the main barriers to the broader evaluation, commercial exploitation and clinical use of renal MRI biomarkers. This position paper lays out PARENCHIMA’s vision on key clinical questions that MRI must address to become more widely used in patients with kidney disease, first within research settings and ultimately in clinical practice. We then present a series of practical recommendations to accelerate the study and translation of these techniques.
We have established an imaging protocol in order to characterise the normal ligamentous structures in the craniovertebral junction. Thirty volunteers without a history of car accident or head or neck trauma underwent MR imaging with 2-mm-thick proton-density-weighted sections in three orthogonal planes. The alar ligaments were clearly seen in every case and had three different configurations in cross-section: round, ovoid or wing-like. A broadening from lateral to medial in the coronal plane was observed in all cases. The transverse ligament was clearly demonstrated in 26 out of 30 cases. The ligament was flattened where it arched across the dens. Towards the insertions the ligament twisted into an oblique-horizontal orientation. The lower tectorial membrane had a median portion merging with the dura, and a lateral portion separated from it. Between the dens and clivus this membrane either merged totally with dura or was partly separated from it by a thin layer of fat. The posterior atlanto-occipital membrane was clearly demonstrated. It either merged with the dura or was partly or totally separated from it by a fat layer. The anterior atlanto-occipital membrane was inconsistently seen and could not be evaluated. Our refined MR protocol improves the visualisation of the craniovertebral ligamentous structures, and may in the future give new insight into post-traumatic neck disorders up to now poorly understood.
Our aim was to characterise and classify structural changes in the alar ligaments in the late stage of whiplash injuries by use of a new MRI protocol, and to evaluate the reliability and the validity of this classification. We studied 92 whiplash-injured and 30 uninjured individuals who underwent proton density-weighted MRI of the craniovertebral junction in three orthogonal planes. Changes in the alar ligaments (grades 0-3) based on the ratio between the high signal area and the total cross-sectional area were rated twice at a 4-month interval, independently by three radiologists. Inter- and intraobserver statistics were calculated by ordinary and weighted kappa. Cases classified differently were reviewed to identify potential causes for disagreement. The alar ligaments were satisfactorily demonstrated in all cases (244 ligaments in 122 individuals). The lesions, 2-9 years after the injury, varied from small high-signal spots to high signal throughout the cross-sectional area. Signal was highest near the condylar insertion in 82 of 94 ligaments, indicating a lesion near that insertion, and near the dental insertion in eight, indicating a medial lesion. No grade 2 or 3 lesion was found in the control group. At least two observers assigned the same grade to 214 ligaments (87.7%) on the second occasion. In 30 ligaments (12.3%) this agreement was not obtained. Pair-wise interobserver agreement (weighted kappa) was fair to moderate (0.31-0.54) in the first grading, improving to moderate (0.49-0.57) in the second. Intraobserver agreement (weighted kappa) was moderate to good (0.43-0.70). Whiplash trauma can cause permanent damage to the alar ligaments, which can be shown by high-resolution proton density-weighted MRI. Reliability of classification of alar ligament lesions needs to be improved.
In this unselected population of patients with classical 21OHD, we found high frequencies of adrenal tumours, particularly myelolipomas, and of hyperplasia and hypoplasia, and TART in SW. It is important that physicians are aware that benign adrenal and testicular tumours occur frequently in 21OHD. Furthermore, these findings may reflect inappropriate glucocorticoid therapy, making a case for the advancement of novel physiological treatment modalities.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the 1-year results of single-session sclerotherapy of symptomatic benign non-parasitic liver cysts performed with maximum 10 min time of ethanol exposure. During the period 1995-1999, 15 symptomatic liver cysts in nine patients--eight women and one man--were treated with 10 min time of exposure to ethanol. Ultrasound-guided puncture combined with fluoroscopy was used for catheter placement. Alcohol sclerotherapy was performed with a maximum volume of ethanol 96% of 10% of the cyst volume, never exceeding 100 ml. At follow-up the patients were examined with liver function tests, ultrasound or CT examination, clinical examination, and interview by a gastrointestinal surgeon. Ten cysts in seven patients (six women and one man; age range 44-61 years, median age 58 years), who had a follow-up of at least 1 year, were included. The original cyst volumes were 30-4110 ml (median 392 ml). After a follow-up period of 12-47 months (median 23 months), cyst volumes were 0-523 ml (median 21.5 ml) with a reduction of the median cyst volume by 95% ( p<0,005). All patients experienced relief of their clinical symptoms. Except for pain, no complications were observed. Sclerotherapy using only one session and maximum 10 min time of exposure to ethanol represents an effective treatment of symptomatic liver cysts.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the ability of MR imaging with an endorectal coil (erMRI) to predict the local pathological stage of prostatic carcinoma prior to radical prostatectomy. Thirty-one consecutive patients (median age 61 years, range 40-71 years) with clinically localised prostate cancer were assessed preoperatively by endorectal MRI (at 1.0 T). The pulse sequences consisted of fast spin-echo axial and coronal T2-weighted images and inversion recovery with two echoes for axial fat-suppressed images. The assessment of tumour stage and measurement of tumour dimension by erMRI were compared with the corresponding findings on whole-mount step sections of the surgical specimens. Postoperatively, 14 of the 31 patients (45 %) were found to have extracapsular extension, 7 with capsular penetration (CP) only, and 7 had a combination of CP and seminal vesicle invasion (SVI). Capsular penetration was detected by erMRI with a sensitivity of 0.71 and specificity of 0.47, whereas the sensitivity for SVI detection was 0.71 and the specificity 0.83. Endorectal MRI for staging clinically localised prostatic carcinoma gives a good prediction of invasion of the seminal vesicles but is unreliable in predicting capsular penetration.
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