MRI of the small bowel is a new method for the assessment of inflammatory bowel diseases. However, inflammatory bowel disease can affect both the small and large bowel. Therefore, our goal was to assess the feasibility of displaying the small bowel and colon simultaneously by MR imaging. Eighteen patients with inflammatory bowel disease were studied. For small bowel distension, patients ingested a solution containing mannitol and locust bean gum. Furthermore, the colon was rectally filled with water. MR examinations were performed on a 1.5-T system. Before and after intravenous gadolinium administration, a T1w data set was collected. All patients underwent conventional colonoscopy as a standard of reference. The oral ingestion and the rectal application of water allowed an assessment of the small bowel and colon in all patients. By means of MRI (endoscopy), 19 (13) inflamed bowel segments in the colon and terminal ileum were detected. Furthermore, eight additional inflammatory lesions in the jejunum and proximal ileum that had not been endoscopically accessible were found by MRI. The simultaneous display of the small and large bowel by MRI is feasible. Major advantages of the proposed MR concept are related to its non-invasive character as well as to the potential to visualize parts of the small bowel that cannot be reached by endoscopy.
Objective evidence for coronary lesion significance can be obtained with ischemic stress testing. Since flow-limiting stenoses have already undergone compensatory vasodilatation to maintain flow, the response to vasoactive stimulation is dampened. The degree of response limitation is reflected by the coronary flow reserve (CFR). Absolute volume flow rates can be accurately and noninvasively measured with MRI techniques. The purpose was to assess the ability to measure coronary volume flow rate noninvasively, and characterize the effect of pharmacologic stress on coronary flow quantitatively by using ultrafast, breath-held segmented k-space phase-contrast-MR imaging (PC-MRI). Ten healthy volunteers were examined by using ultrafast breath-held PC-MRI. Coronary volume flow rates were measured in the anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) at rest and following intravenous administration of dipyridamole. CFR was determined based on these data. Mean LAD volume flow rates increased from 38 +/- 11 ml/min before application of dipyridamole to 169 +/- 42 ml/min. The mean CFR amounted to 5.0 +/- 2.6 (median = 4.15). This study demonstrates the feasibility of breath-held PC-MRI to noninvasively quantify coronary volume flow rates over the cardiac cycle. Pharmacologically induced changes in volume flow rate and thus CFR can be quantitated.
The aim of this study was to compare the diagnostic performance of contrast-enhanced fast multiplanar gradient-echo (GRE) and T2-weighted fast spin-echo (FSE) image sets in the assessment of uterus, cervix, and vagina. Fast (up to 20 contiguous sections in 23 s) multiplanar GRE and FSE images of 45 patients referred for imaging of the female pelvis were evaluated retrospectively with regard to overall image quality and the ability to detect normal anatomic structures, as well as lesion conspicuity. Results were compared with histologic findings (n = 29) or clinical follow-up. Furthermore, a quantitative assessment of contrast-to-noise ratios among normal uterine and cervical structures as well as uterine lesions was performed for both sequences. On GRE images, uterine and cervical differentiation was best seen on the image sets acquired 15 and 60 s following contrast enhancement and results were significantly better compared with delayed images (p < 0.05). Delineation of the junctional zone was significantly (p < 0.05) better on FSE compared with GRE images; no significant difference was seen for the other anatomic structures. Overall image quality of GRE and FSE images was similar. Sensitivity for lesion detection based on both GRE and FSE images was 96% with a sensitivity of 93% for GRE, and 81% for FSE images alone, respectively. Using the extended McNemar chi 2 test, the difference in diagnostic performance between FSE and GRE revealed no significant difference, whereas the combination of both techniques performed better than FSE imaging alone (p < 0.05). The presented data suggest that dynamic contrast-enhanced GRE imaging should be part of an MR examination of the female pelvis. Combined GRE and FSE imaging provide an excellent sensitivity in the assessment of uterine and vaginal pathologies.
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