Investigative radiology
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Investigative radiology · Nov 2009
Comparative StudyCorrelation of fat distribution in whole body MRI with generally used anthropometric data.
: Obesity is a commonly known risk for many diseases such as metabolic syndrome and cardiovascular disease. Especially important is the discrimination of the adipose tissue inside the abdomen and the subcutaneous adipose tissue. Aim of this study was to compare the whole body fat distribution, and the volume of different adipose tissue compartments respectively, with anthropometric data. ⋯ : We compared different body measures and body fat devices with the whole body fat distribution acquired by MRI. Generally, there were significant correlations of all modalities with body fat content (TAT) and mainly with SCAT. Correlations with VAT compartment were much weaker and an adequate estimation of VAT is, therefore, not possible. Only WHR revealed significant correlations with the fat in the body center, but only in women. If it is important to investigate especially the VAT which is responsible for a higher cardiovascular risk, risk for a metabolic syndrome and that is correlated with the course of different psychiatric diseases, cross sectional techniques such as MRI can not be substituted by simpler methods.
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Investigative radiology · Nov 2009
High-pitch electrocardiogram-triggered computed tomography of the chest: initial results.
Chest pain is one of the most frequent symptoms in the emergency department. A variety of different diseases, some of them acutely life threatening, can be the underlying cause. Electrocardiogram (ECG)-gated computed tomography angiography of the thorax has been proposed as a cost and time effective imaging technique for these patients. We describe a new high-pitch scan mode, which has been developed specifically for low-dose ECG-triggered computed tomography angiography using dual source computed tomography (CT). ⋯ Our initial results indicate that this high-pitch scan mode allows motion artifact free and accurate visualization of the thoracic vessels, and diagnostic image quality of the coronary arteries in patients with low and stable heart rates at a very low radiation exposure.
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Investigative radiology · Oct 2009
Diffusion weighted imaging: a comprehensive evaluation of a fast spin echo DWI sequence with BLADE (PROPELLER) k-space sampling at 3 T, using a 32-channel head coil in acute brain ischemia.
To evaluate the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and diagnostic quality of diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) using a fast spin echo (FSE) sequence with BLADE k-space trajectory at 3 T in combination with a 32-channel head coil. The scan was compared with a standard spin echo (SE) echo-planar imaging (EPI) DWI and a high resolution SE EPI DWI sequence. ⋯ Our preliminary data demonstrates the feasibility of a FSE EPI DWI scan with radial-like k-space sampling, using a 32-channel coil at 3 T in acute brain ischemia. The BLADE DWI was the preferred scan for the detection of acute diffusion abnormalities because of the lack of bulk susceptibility artifacts.
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Investigative radiology · Oct 2009
MR evaluation of left ventricular volumes and function: threshold-based 3D segmentation versus short-axis planimetry.
Our study aimed to evaluate a three-dimensional (3D) threshold-based, region-growing segmentation algorithm for the assessment of left ventricular (LV) volumes in cardiac MRI. ⋯ Automated threshold-based segmentation of the left ventricle allows fast and reproducible assessment of LV volumes in cardiac MRI. Exclusion of papillary muscles and myocardial trabeculations from LV volumes leads to systematically lower LV volumes compared with short axis planimetry with semi-automatic contour detection.
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Investigative radiology · Oct 2009
Comparative StudyWhole-body MRI, including diffusion-weighted imaging, for the initial staging of malignant lymphoma: comparison to computed tomography.
To assess the value of whole-body magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), for the initial staging of malignant lymphoma, compared with computed tomography (CT). ⋯ Our results suggest that initial staging of malignant lymphoma using whole-body MRI (without DWI and with DWI) equals staging using CT in the majority of patients, whereas whole-body MRI never understaged relative to CT. Furthermore, whole-body MRI mostly correctly overstaged relative to CT, with a possible advantage of using DWI.