14:15 |
0147. |
3D Visualization of
Quantitative T2 Relaxation
Times in the Femoral Condylar Cartilage in Healthy and
ACL-injured Individuals
Uchechukwuka D Monu1,2, Emily J McWalter2,
Caroline D Jordan2,3, Brian A Hargreaves1,2,
and Garry E Gold2,3
1Electrical Engineering, Stanford University,
Stanford, California, United States, 2Radiology,
Stanford University, Stanford, California, United
States,3Bioengineering, Stanford University,
Stanford, California, United States
Osteoarthritis is a degenerative joint disease that may
affect more than half of the ACL-injured population.
Current MRI osteoarthritis studies often evaluate just a
single slice from the medial and lateral compartments of
the full knee, which may not fully describe the
cartilage volume variation or longitudinal changes. In
this work, we provide a method of visualizing
quantitative maps of the entire cartilage surface using
projection maps. T2 relaxation time differences between
healthy volunteers and ACL-injured subjects are clear
and the global percent short term CV of the implemented
technique is comparable to the ROI approach reported in
literature.
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14:27 |
0148. |
The angular dependence of
T1 relaxation
in normal and abnormal patellae with histological
correlation
Jiang Du1, Chantal Pauli2, Shihong
Li1, Sheronda Statum1, Won Bae1,
Eric Chang1, and Christine B Chung1
1Radiology, University of California, San
Diego, San Diego, CA, United States, 2Pathology,
University Hospital Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland
Both T2 and T1rho have been employed to evaluate
articular cartilage degeneration. The magic angle effect
in T2 relaxation is well understood. However, the
literature regarding T1rho relaxation mechanisms is
inconsistent. Some researchers reported much reduced or
negligible magic angle effect in T1rho, while other
researchers have reported significant magic angle effect
in T1rho relaxation. Furthermore, magic angle effects in
normal vs. abnormal cartilage are unknown. In this study
we aimed to systematically evaluate the magic angle
effect on T2 and T1rho in histological confirmed normal
and abnormal cartilage at 3T
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14:39 |
0149. |
Sensitivity of
Multicomponent Driven Equilibrium Single Observation of T1
and T2 (mcDESPOT) to Magic Angle Effects in Bovine Articular
Cartilage at 3.0T
Rajeev Chaudhary1, Fang Liu2, Nade
Sritanyaratana1, Jarred M. Kaiser3,
Samuel A. Hurley2, Walter F. Block1,2,
and Richard X. Kijowski4
1Biomedical Engineering, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States, 2Medical
Physics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI,
United States, 3Mechanical
Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison,
WI, United States, 4Radiology,
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United
States
This study was performed to investigate the influence of
the magic angle effect on multi-component T2 parameters
measured using mcDESPOT. Ex-vivo articular cartilage
specimens were imaged using mcDESPOT at angles of 0°,
30°, 55°, and 60° relative to the main magnetic field.
Percent changes in T2 parameters from 0° to 55° where
there was maximum magic angle effect was 42.9% for
single-component T2, 20.0% for T2 of bulk water loosely
bound to the macromolecular matrix, 40.0% for the T2 of
water tightly bound to proteoglycan, and -4.9% for the
fraction of water tightly bound to proteoglycan.
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14:51 |
0150. |
Hip T1rho and T2 relaxation
times in individuals with and without cartilage lesions
Cory Wyatt1, Deepak Kumar1,
Karupppasamy Subburaj2, Divya Narayanan3,
Sonia Lee1, Lorenzo Nardo1, Thomas
Link1, Thomas Vail4, Richard Souza1,
and Sharmila Majumdar1
1Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University
of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CALIFORNIA,
United States, 2Radiology
and Biomedical Imaging, University of California San
Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States, 3Bioengineering,
University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, California,
United States, 4Orthopaedic
Surgery, University of California San Francisco, San
Francisco, CALIFORNIA, United States
The purpose of this study was to measure T1rho and T2
relaxation times in vivo in healthy controls, subjects
with mild OA, and subjects with femoroacetabular
impingement (FAI). The volunteers were scanned with a
segmented 3D SPGR MAPSS T1rho/T2 sequence on one hip and
the cartilage was clinically scored for lesions. The
femoral and acetabular cartilage were segmented
separately and then segmented into 8 equal regions.
Significant increases in the T1rho and T2 relaxation
times were seen in the acetabular cartilage while no
significant changes were seen in the femoral cartilage.
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15:03 |
0151. |
Diagnostic performance of a
3D FSE T2 and T1rho sequence for quantitative mapping of
articular cartilage composition for the detection of
morphological internal knee derangements
Edwin H. Oei1,2, Weitian Chen3,
Jason L. Dragoo4, and Garry E. Gold1,5
1Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford,
California, United States, 2Radiology,
Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, ZH, Netherlands, 3GE
Healthcare, Menlo Park, California, United States, 4Orthopaedic
Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, California,
United States, 5Bioengineering,
Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States
Although quantitative MRI for articular cartilage
composition shows promise for early detection of
osteoarthritis (OA), large-scale application is hampered
by long scan times if added to routine MRI protocols. We
assessed the performance of a quantitative 3D FSE T2 and
T1rho mapping sequence to diagnose cruciate ligament and
meniscal tears, bone marrow lesions, and cartilage
defects. For anterior cruciate ligament and medial
meniscal tears, diagnostic performance of the 3D FSE
T1rho mapping sequence was good and superior to T2
mapping. This sequence may be used to replace routine
clinical pulse sequences, enhancing scan time efficiency
and potentially accelerating large-scale implementation.
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15:15 |
0152.
|
Sodium MRI of Articular
Cartilage with Improved SNR Using Coherent SSFP Imaging at
7T
Stefan Zbyn1, Oliver Bieri2,
Vladimir Mlynarik1, Vladimir Juras1,
and Siegfried Trattnig1
1High Field MR Centre, Department of
Biomedical Imaging and Image-Guided Therapy, Medical
University Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 2Division
of Radiological Physics, Department of Radiology,
University of Basel Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
Coherent steady state sequences, such as FISP or
TrueFISP, may provide higher SNR than spoiled gradient
echo (SPGR). However, to our best knowledge, they have
not yet been investigated for in vivo 23Na-MRI. In this
study, in vivo and ex vivo knee measurements at 7T were
performed to assess optimal measurement parameters for
FISP and TrueFISP, and to evaluate their SNR compared to
SPGR. FISP and TrueFISP provided significantly higher
SNR than SPGR in cartilage, muscle and blood. The higher
SNR may be traded off for higher resolution or shorter
measurement times and help to get 23Na-MRI into clinical
practice.
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15:27 |
0153. |
UTE MR Morphology and
Histopathology of the Osteochondral Junction of the Knee -
permission withheld
Won C Bae1, Sheronda Statum1, Reni
Biswas1, Darryl D D'Lima2, Eric Y
Chang3,4, and Christine B Chung3,4
1Department of Radiology, University of
California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, United States, 2Scripps
Clinic, La Jolla, CA, United States, 3VA
San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, CA, United
States, 4University
of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, United States
UTE MRI enables direct evaluation of osteochondral
junction of the knee. This study compared UTE MR
morphology and histopathologic changes of the
osteochondral junction, including duplication of
tidemark and vascular invasion. While the occurrence of
tidemark duplication was similar between UTE-normal and
–abnormal samples, vascular invasion was significantly
greater in UTE-abnormal samples. Further investigation
is warranted to fully understand relationship between
osteochondral changes and UTE MR morphology.
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15:39 |
0154. |
Longitudinal texture
changes to UTE-T2* following ACL reconstruction
Ashley Williams1, Yongxian Qian2,
and Constance R Chu1
1Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Stanford
University, Stanford, CA, United States, 2Radiology,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States
This study tests the hypothesis that evaluation of the
spatial distribution of cartilage UTE-T2* values,
assessed via grey-level co-occurrence matrix texture
statistics, will better detect sub-surface damage and
disease progression to cartilage in ACL-injured subjects
than mean UTE-T2* alone. Both cross-sectional
comparisons with uninjured controls and longitudinal
evaluations of ACL-injured subjects over 2 years after
ligament reconstruction indicate that texture analyses
provide evidence of progressive cartilage degeneration
following ACL-injury that is not reflected in mean
UTE-T2* value. Texture evaluations in this work
augmented the ability of UTE-T2* mapping to
quantitatively monitor cartilage status in knees at risk
of developing OA.
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15:51 |
0155. |
Delayed gadolinium-enhanced
MRI of cartilage (dGEMRIC) is superior to T1rho-mapping in
measuring cartilage sulphated glycosaminoglycan content:
preliminary results of an in-vivo validation study using an
ex-vivo reference standard for cartilage sulphated
glycosaminoglycan content
Jasper van Tiel1,2, Gyula Kotek1,
Max Reijman2, Pieter K. Bos2,
Esther E. Bron1,3, Stefan Klein1,3,
Jan A. Verhaar2, Gabriel P. Krestin1,
Harrie Weinans2,4, and Edwin H. Oei1
1Radiology, Erasmus MC, University Medical
Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands, 2Orthopedic
Surgery, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center
Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands, 3Medical
Informatics, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center
Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands, 4Orthopedic
Surgery, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht,
Utrecht, Netherlands
Delayed gadolinium-enhanced MRI of cartilage (dGEMRIC)
has become a standard to quantitatively measure
cartilage sulphated glycosaminoglycan (sGAG) content.
T1rho-mapping has been proposed as non-contrast-enhanced
alternative to dGEMRIC to also quantitatively measure
cartilage sGAG content. However, no thorough validation
studies comparing both techniques acquired in-vivo
against a tissue reference standard for sGAG have been
performed. Our preliminary results suggest that dGEMRIC
can accurately measure articular cartilage sGAG content,
whereas T1rho-mapping is not suitable for this purpose.
Therefore, despite the need to use a contrast agent, we
consider dGEMRIC to be superior to T1rho-mapping for
quantitatively measuring cartilage sGAG content.
|
16:03 |
0156. |
Combination of a radial
sequence for in vivo DTI of articular cartialge with an
iterative model-based reconstruction
Jose G Raya1, Florian Knoll1,
Lauren Burcaw1, Sina Milani1,
Daniel K Sodickson1, and Tobias K Block1
1New York University Langone Medical Center,
New York, NY, United States
We combine of a radial spin echo diffusion tensor
imaging (RAISED) sequence for DTI of articular cartilage
with a model-based iterative reconstruction, which
directly calculates the diffusion tensor without
reconstructing the intermediate diffusion-weighted
images. This adds flexibility to the data acquisition.
Purpose of this work was to assess value of different
acquisition strategies for a model-based reconstruction.
We tested four protocols with different resolutions,
b-values and acquisitions times. We compared our
model-based approach with the standard gridding
reconstruction. We found improvement of the DTI
parameters with the model based reconstruction and
identify an optimal protocol for RAISED.
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