• J Comput Assist Tomogr · Jul 2005

    Comparative Study Clinical Trial

    Efficacy of contrast medium use for neuroimaging at 3.0 T: utility of IR-FSE compared to other T1-weighted pulse sequences.

    • Frank Fischbach, Harald Bruhn, Maciej Pech, Fabian Neumann, Jens Ricke, Roland Felix, and Karl Titus Hoffmann.
    • Department of Radiology Charité, Campus Virchow-Klinikum, Humboldt-University Medical School, 13353 Berlin, Germany. Frank.Fischbach@charite.de
    • J Comput Assist Tomogr. 2005 Jul 1; 29 (4): 499-505.

    AbstractAs inversion-recovery (IR) technique improves T1 contrast at high field strength, signal enhancement by T1-shortening contrast media may be affected. To clarify the different enhancement properties at 3.0 T, the authors compared T1-weighted sequences. Twelve contrast-enhancing lesions were investigated by spin-echo (SE), inversion recovery fast spin-echo (IR-FSE), two-dimensional gradient-echo (2D GE), and magnetization-prepared three-dimensional gradient-echo (3D GE) sequences and evaluated by comparing signal-intensity enhancements within the lesions. In addition, signal-to-noise-ratios (SNR) and contrast-to-noise-ratios (CNR) were measured. On average, signal enhancement of the lesions amounted to 60% for SE, 57% for IR-FSE, 32% for 2D GE, and 35% for 3D GE images. CNR of gray matter versus white matter was significantly higher for IR SE and GE imaging than for genuine SE and 2D GE acquisitions (Wilcoxon test), while 2D GE imaging alone had an excellent SNR. As IR-FSE images provide an excellent CNR for gray and white matter in the brain and contrast enhancement performs almost similarly well compared with SE imaging, this technique appears to be well suited for T1-weighted neuroimaging without and with contrast enhancement at 3.0 T. However, the inherent blurring of the IR-FSE can lead to poor performance for very small lesions.

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