European radiology
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To prospectively evaluate whether dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI can assess vascularity within non-unions and predicts clinical outcome in combination with the clinical Non-Union Scoring System (NUSS). ⋯ • Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging can assess vascularity within bony non-unions. • Vascularised ununited fractures appear better at 1-year CT than poorly vascularised fractures. • Non-union healing after osteosynthesis or osteoinductive drugs fundamentally requires vascularity. • DCE MRI predicts treatment outcome better than the clinical Non-Union Scoring System. • DCE MRI is clinically feasible to predict treatment outcome in bony non-unions.
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Comparative Study
Free-breathing contrast-enhanced T1-weighted gradient-echo imaging with radial k-space sampling for paediatric abdominopelvic MRI.
To compare the image quality of contrast-enhanced abdominopelvic 3D fat-suppressed T1-weighted gradient-echo imaging with radial and conventional Cartesian k-space acquisition schemes in paediatric patients. ⋯ • Numerous techniques are required to provide optimal MR images in paediatric patients. • Radial free-breathing contrast-enhanced acquisition demonstrated excellent image quality. • Image quality and lesion conspicuity were better with radial than Cartesian acquisition. • More lesions were detected on contrast-enhanced radial than on Cartesian acquisition. • Radial GRE can be used for performing abdominopelvic MRI in paediatric patients.
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Validate the four-point visual rating scale for posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) on magnetic resonance images (MRI) through quantitative grey matter (GM) volumetry and voxel-based morphometry (VBM) to justify its use in clinical practice. ⋯ • Visual rating scale reflects grey matter atrophy in posterior brain regions. • Different PCA scores corresponded well to different quantitative degrees of atrophy. • Inferior parietal gyrus volume influenced assessment based on the visual rating scale. • This simple visual rating scale makes it useful for radiological dementia assessment.
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To measure the median nerve (MN) stiffness by quantitative shear wave elastography (SWE) at the carpal tunnel inlet and to determine whether SWE can be used in the diagnosis of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS). ⋯ • Clinical examination is important for diagnosis of carpal tunnel syndrome • Shear wave elastography (SWE) offers new clinical opportunities within diagnostic ultrasound • SWE is highly reproducible in evaluation of median nerve stiffness • Median nerve stiffness is significantly increased in carpal tunnel syndrome • Elastography could become useful in diagnosis of carpal tunnel syndrome.
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To evaluate the usefulness of normalising intra-tumour tracer accumulation on (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) to reference tissue uptake for characterisation of peripheral nerve sheath tumours (PNSTs) in neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) compared with the established maximum standardised uptake value (SUVmax) cut-off of >3.5. ⋯ • (18)F-FDG PET/CT is used for detecting malignancy in PNSTs in NF1 patients • An SUV max cut-off value may give false-positive results for benign plexiform neurofibromas • Specificity can be significantly increased using a tumour-to-liver ratio.