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J Comput Assist Tomogr · May 2014
Comparative StudyHigh spatial resolution, respiratory-gated, t1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of the liver and the biliary tract during the hepatobiliary phase of gadoxetic Acid-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging.
- Eun Sun Lee, Jeong Min Lee, Mi Hye Yu, Cheong-Il Shin, Hyun Sik Woo, Ijin Joo, Alto Stemmer, Joon Koo Han, and Byung Ihn Choi.
- From the *Department of Radiology, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, Republic of Korea; †Institute of Radiation Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea; ‡Department of Radiology, Konkuk University Medical Center, Seoul, South Korea; §Department of Radiology, Seoul National University Boramae Hospital, Seoul, Republic of Korea; and ∥Siemens Healthcare, Erlangen, Germany.
- J Comput Assist Tomogr. 2014 May 1; 38 (3): 360-6.
PurposeThe aim of this study was to demonstrate the clinical feasibility of a recently developed navigator-gated, 3-dimensional gradient echo (3D-GRE) sequence for high-resolution, T1-weighted imaging (HR-T1WI) during the hepatobiliary phase (HBP) of gadoxetic acid-enhanced liver magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).Materials And MethodsEighty-seven consecutive patients who underwent gadoxetic acid-enhanced liver MRI were included in this study. To obtain HR-T1WI (acquired resolution, 1 × 1 × 2 mm), a gated 3D-GRE sequence (gated volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination [VIBE]; Siemens) with fat suppression was performed during the HBP and was then compared with standard breath-hold (BH)-GRE sequence (BH-VIBE). For the respiration gating, the phase ordering using the automatic window selection technique was used. Three readers independently scored the artifacts and the imaging quality (IQ) of both image sets and also classified BH-VIBE images into acceptable or unacceptable IQ. Noise and signal-noise ratio of the BH-VIBE and gated-VIBE sequences were compared, and image quality improvement using gated VIBE compared with BH-VIBE was determined when BH-VIBE shows unacceptable IQ.ResultsThe gated-VIBE sequence successfully provided HR-T1WI, having diagnosable image quality in all patients except 4 patients in 1 reader (95.4%, 83/87). The gated-VIBE sequence showed relatively higher levels of noise (mean [SD], 6.04 [3.18] vs. 3.57 [0.66]) but similar signal-noise ratio (93.60 [39.47] vs. 100.05 [28.94]) compared with BH-VIBE (P = 0.15). In the qualitative analysis, the gated 3D-GRE sequence showed higher scores for depicting focal liver lesions and the sharpness of the hepatic edges (P < 0.0001) but lower subjective overall IQ than did the BH-VIBE (P < 0.01). However, in the patients showing unacceptable BH-VIBE image quality, the degree of improvement of the IQ using the gated-VIBE technique was significantly higher than that seen in the patients showing acceptable BH-VIBE image quality (P < 0.01).ConclusionsT1-weighted gated-VIBE showed technical feasibility for HR-T1WI during HBP imaging of gadoxetic acid-enhanced MRI.
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