| Literature DB >> 24683524 |
Stefan Zbýň1, Vladimír Mlynárik1, Vladimir Juras1, Pavol Szomolanyi1, Siegfried Trattnig1.
Abstract
Many studies have proved that noninvasive sodium MR imaging can directly determine the cartilage GAG content, which plays a central role in cartilage homeostasis. New technical developments in the recent decade have helped to transfer this method from in vitro to pre-clinical in vivo studies. Sodium imaging has already been applied for the evaluation of cartilage and repair tissue in patients after various cartilage repair surgery techniques and in patients with osteoarthritis. These studies showed that this technique could be helpful not only for assessment of the cartilage status, but also predictive for osteoarthritis. However, due to the low detectable sodium MR signal in cartilage, sodium imaging is still challenging, and further hardware and software improvements are necessary for translating sodium MR imaging into clinical practice, preferably to 3T MR systems.Entities:
Keywords: Cartilage; Osteoarthritis; Repair tissue; Sodium MR imaging
Year: 2014 PMID: 24683524 PMCID: PMC3963441 DOI: 10.1007/s40134-014-0041-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Radiol Rep ISSN: 2167-4825
Fig. 1Schematic representation of a Cartesian, b radial projection and c twisted projection k-space trajectories
Fig. 2Quantification of sodium concentration in bovine cartilage. a Sagittal sodium 3D-GRE image of bovine patella and four saline/agarose phantoms of different concentrations (150–300 mmol/l). b Mean calibration curve obtained from four different slices of a 3D data set. Circles represent signal intensities measured from four saline/agarose phantoms. Error bars indicate the 95 % confidence intervals. From [41], with permission
Fig. 3Proton density-weighted MR images with fat suppression (left column) and color-coded sodium 3D-GRE images (right column) from a patient after MFX treatment (upper row) and a subject after MACT surgery (lower row). The area of cartilage repair tissue is located between the arrows. Color scale represents the sodium signal intensity values
Fig. 4Sodium concentration maps from a control subject (upper row) and from a patient with OA (lower row). Sodium images were acquired with fluid suppression using IR (IRW) and without fluid suppression (R3D). Note that the difference in cartilage sodium concentration between the control and OA patient is higher with the fluid-suppressed radial sequence than with the radial sequence without fluid suppression. From [85••], with permission