10:30 |
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Introduction
Scott B. Reeder |
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10:54 |
554. |
Hepatic
MR Imaging for Differentiation of Biopsy-Proven Steatosis,
Iron Deposition, and Combined Disease: One-Dimensional in /
Opposed Phase Analysis Vs. Two-Dimensional Computer-Aided
Dixon Discrimination
Mustafa Rifaat Bashir1, Elmar Max Merkle1,
Daniel Tobias Boll1
1Radiology, Duke University
Medical Center, Durham, NC, United States
Steatosis hepatis functions
as an inducer of hepatic iron metabolism dysregulation. MR
two-point Dixon T1w imaging with subsequent comprehensive
four-phase decomposition analysis facilitated not only
metabolite decomposition of intrahepatic lipids and iron
ions in steatosis hepatis and hepatic iron overload, but
also allowed decomposition of metabolites in combined
disease in an in-vivo patient population employing manual as
well as computer-aided two-dimensional metabolite
discrimination algorithms, with liver biopsy functioning as
reference standard. |
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11:06 |
555. |
Simultaneous Measurement of Hepatic Lipid and Iron with
High-Speed T2-Corrected Single-Voxel Spectroscopy (HISTO):
Analysis of Water-Lipid Compartments
Puneet Sharma1, Hiroumi D. Kitajima1,
Khalil N. Salman2, Bobby Kalb3, Diego
R. Martin3
1Radiology, Emory Healthcare,
Atlanta, GA, United States; 2Radiology, Emory
University, Atlanta, GA, United States; 3Radiology,
Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, United
States
This investigation analyzes
use of a fast T2-corrected MRS method (HISTO) for the
simultaneous measurement of hepatic lipid and iron. The
multi-echo acquisition allows correction of lipid fraction,
while providing R2 measures of water and lipid separately.
HISTO was performed in lipid phantoms with variable iron
content, and in 3 patients with induced iron susceptibility.
It was found that R2-water exhibited strong correlation with
iron amount, while R2-lipid showed no dependence, suggesting
compartmental division of iron effects. Since imaging
evaluates bulk R2*, correlation with iron may be influenced
by lipid content. HISTO isolates R2-water and R2-lipid for
robust iron assessment. |
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11:18 |
556. |
Preliminary Clinical Experience with a Multiecho 2-Point
DIXON (MDIXON) Sequence at 3T as an Efficient Alternative
for Both the SAR-Intensive Acquired In- And Out-Of-Phase
Chemical Shift Imaging as Well as for 3D Fat-Suppressed
T1-Weighted Sequences Used
Thomas G. Perkins1, Jeremy L. Van Tilburg2,
Gwenael Herigault3, Holger Eggers4,
Adri Duijndam3, Gabriele Beck3, Shahid
M. Hussain2,5
1Philips Healthcare, Cleveland,
OH, United States; 2The Nebraska Medical Center,
Omaha, NE, United States; 3Philips Healthcare,
Best, Netherlands; 4Philips Research, Hamburg,
Germany; 5The University of Nebraska Medical
Center, Omaha, NE, United States
Body MRI protocols at 3T are
often lengthy due to decreased duty cycle, high SAR, and
general inefficiencies of the sequences used. This study
(n=22) assessed a new sequence, 2-point mDIXON (mDIXON),
which, like the original DIXON, can provide in-phase (IP),
out-of-phase (OP), water, and fat images with increased duty
cycle and better image quality compared to existing methods.
New mDIXON is a more efficient alternative and can replace
the existing 2D IP and OP as well as gadolinium-enhanced 3D
T1-weighted (eTHRIVE) sequences. The new strategy based on
mDIXON will lead to much shorter body MRI exam times at 3T. |
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11:30 |
557. |
Is There
an Effect of Gd-EOB-DTPA on Hepatic T2 Signal Intensity and
Apparent Diffusion Coefficient?
Hersh
Chandarana1, Ely Felker1, Bachir
Taouli1,2
1Radiology, NYU Langone Medical
Center, New York, NY, United States; 2Radiology,
Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York, NY, United States
Gd-EOB-DTPA is recently FDA
approved liver-specific contrast agent which has shown
potential in liver lesion detection and characterization
when delayed (~ 20 min.) post-contrast imaging is performed.
However, extending imaging protocol by 20 minutes is not
convenient. One approach to decrease imaging time is to
perform T2 (T2WI) and diffusion imaging (DWI) after contrast
injection between equilibrium and delayed phases of
enhancement. In this study, we evaluated effect of
Gd-EOB-DTPA on liver and lesion signal intensity on T2WI and
DWI and demonstrated minimal effect on liver T2 SI, and no
significant change on liver and lesion apparent diffusion
coefficient (ADC). |
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11:42 |
558. |
Gd-EOB-DTPA-Enhanced MRI in Cirrhotic Liver in Rats; with
Reference to Transporter Activity and Morphological Change
of Bile Canaliculi
Natsuko Tsuda1,
Osamu Matsui2
1Bayer Yakuhin, Ltd,
Osaka, Japan; 2Kanazawa University Graduate
School of Medical Science, Kanazawa, Japan
The purpose of this study was
to analyze the difference of signal intensity on
Gd-EOB-DTPA-enhanced MRI between normal and cirrhotic livers
in rats in correlation with the expressions of the
transporters of Gd-EOB-DTPA and the morphopathological
change of bile canaliculi and to discuss the possible
mechanisms of the signal profile of Gd-EOB-DTPA-enhanced MRI
in cirrhotic livers. As a result, it was found that liver
cirrhosis would interfere with the uptake of Gd-EOB-DTPA
mediated by oatp1 and promote the elimination of Gd-EOB-DTPA
mediated by mrp2. Therefore, the combination of oatp1
down-regulation and mrp2 up-regulation would lead to
significant signal loss on Gd-EOB-DTPA-enhanced MRI. In
addition to the up-regulation of mrp2, the morphological
change in bile canaliculi and microvilli would have an
impact on Gd-EOB-DTPA elimination. |
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11:54 |
559. |
Lesion
Detectability on T2-Weighted Liver Imaging with Parallel RF
Transmission at 3.0 Tesla: Intraindividual Comparison with
Conventional MR Imaging
Guido Matthias
Kukuk1, Juergen Gieseke1,2, Sebastian
Weber1, Frank Traeber1, Jan Ullrich1,
Nuschin Morakkabati-Spitz1, Daniel Thomas1,
Hans Heinz Schild1, Winfried Albert Willinek1
1Department of
Radiology, University of Bonn, Bonn, NRW, Germany; 2Philips
Healthcare, Best, Netherlands
High field MRI has introduced
new challenges especially for body imaging with respect to
B1 field non-uniformities. Parallel RF transmission allows
for more homogeneous excitation, thus improving image
quality especially for T2-weighted liver imaging at 3.0
Tesla. Therefore, we evaluated 52 patients in an
intraindividual study design to determine the effect of
parallel RF transmission on lesion detectability for
T2-weighted imaging as compared to conventional MR imaging.
Our data demonstrate a significantly higher detection rate
of focal liver lesions using parallel RF transmission. |
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12:06 |
560. |
Respiratory Self-Gating for Free-Breathing Abdominal R2*
Mapping
Ning Jin1,
Andrew C. Larson1,2
1Departments of
Radiology and Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern
University, Chicago, IL, United States; 2Robert
H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center, Chicago, IL, United
States
Accurate R2* measurements are
critical for a wide range of applications. Abdominal R2*
mapping requires breath-holding (BH) to avoid respiratory
motion artifacts. However, overall spatial resolution and
slice coverage is limited by the requisite BH duration. We
developed a respiratory self-gated (RSG) imaging strategy
for free-breathing abdominal R2* mapping. The purpose of
our study was to compare conventional BH R2* measurements to
FB RSG R2* measurements in the liver and kidneys. 3D
RSG-mGRE effectively reduced respiratory motion induced
artifacts and produced accurate FB R2* maps in the liver and
kidneys. |
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12:18 |
561. |
Hemodynamics of Portal Hypertension with 4D Radial Phase
Contrast Imaging: Feasibility at 3.0T
Rakhee Wadhwa Verma1,
Kevin Johnson2, Benjamin Landgraf1,
Alex Frydrychowicz1, Christopher J. Francois1,
Oliver Wieben1,2, Scott B. Reeder1,2
1Radiology, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States; 2Medical
Physics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI,
United States
Portal hypertension (PHTN) is
a secondary complication in patients with cirrhosis and is
associated significant morbidity, including varices and
variceal bleeding, ascites, and portal venous thrombosis.
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the feasibility
of high spatial resolution time resolved 3D radial phase
contrast (PC) for evaluation of the hemodynamics of PHTN
using a 32-channel phased array coil at 3.0T. The
feasibility of comprehensive evaluation of the hemodynamics
of PHTN is demonstrated in patients with cirrhosis. |
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