A new technique is described that allows for the creation of pure pulsatile flow magnetic resonance (MR) images in a single acquisition. Five to 16 electrocardiographically gated images spanning the entire cardiac cycle are obtained with use of a gradient-echo pulse sequence. The section can be varied from 4 mm thick to full thickness projection. Taken singly, each image provides direct assessment of flow direction and velocity. Subtraction of image pairs eliminates signal detected from stationary protons, producing images of pulsatile flow. In this study the technique was used to image the flow of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in healthy subjects and in one patient with syringohydromyelia. The data suggest that multiphasic MR imaging provides a powerful means for the noninvasive assessment of CSF pulsatile flow dynamics and may have potential clinical application for the investigation of a variety of abnormalities such as normal pressure hydrocephalus, syrinx, and spinal block.
We report the first clinical experience with a new method for projective imaging of blood vessels (angiography) using magnetic resonance. Vascular contrast is produced noninvasively by the phase response of moving protons. Diastolic and systolic gated images produce, respectively, flow signal and flow void; the difference image is a map of the pulsatile flow: an arteriogram. Preliminary studies are presented of the lower extremities of one healthy volunteer and four patients (one each with occlusive disease, soft-tissue tumor, arteriovenous malformation, and venous femoral-popliteal graft). Patient data are compared with accompanying conventional arteriograms, and the new method is discussed.
Intravascular signal from flowing blood is frequently observed on magnetic resonance (MR) images and may be indistinguishable from partial or complete vascular occlusion caused by thrombus or tumor. With a phase-display reconstruction method, qualitative assessment of large-vessel patency within the abdomen was undertaken in 15 healthy subjects and 12 patients with angiographically or surgically documented intravascular thrombus or tumor. Computed tomographic (CT) scans were available in all patients for correlation. MR studies were performed with a multisection spin-echo pulse sequence and two-dimensional Fourier transform spatial encoding. Data acquired from a single sequence was reconstituted in two ways to provide both routine anatomic images and a pictorial representation of large-vessel flow on a phase-sensitive image. With this method, reliable and easy differentiation of intraluminal thrombus and tumor from blood flow signal within large vessels was achieved. Information from these phase-display images compared favorably with findings from angiography and contrast-enhanced CT in the determination of luminal patency and obstruction.
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