BACKGROUND: Newborns and small infants have shallow breathing. OBJECTIVE: To suggest criteria for when respiratory gating is necessary during cardiac MRI in newborns and infants. MATERIALS AND METHODS: One-hundred ten data sets of newborns and infants with (n = 92, mean age: 1.9 ± 1.7 [SD] years) and without (n = 18, mean age: 1.6 ± 1.8 [SD] years) navigator gating were analysed retrospectively. The respiratory motion of the right hemidiaphragm was recorded and correlated to age, weight, body surface area and qualitative image quality on a 4-point score. Quantitative image quality assessment was performed (sharpness of the delineation of the ventricular septal wall) as well as a matched-pair comparison between navigator-gated and non-gated data sets. RESULTS: No significant differences were found in overall image quality or in the sharpness of the ventricular septal wall between gated and non-gated scans. A navigator acceptance of >80% was frequently found in patients ages <12 months, body surface area <0.40 m(2), body weight <10 kg and a size of <80 cm. CONCLUSION: Sequences without respiratory gating may be used in newborns and small infants, in particular if age <12 months, body surface area <0.40 m(2), body weight <10 kg and height <80 cm.
BACKGROUND: Newborns and small infants have shallow breathing. OBJECTIVE: To suggest criteria for when respiratory gating is necessary during cardiac MRI in newborns and infants. MATERIALS AND METHODS: One-hundred ten data sets of newborns and infants with (n = 92, mean age: 1.9 ± 1.7 [SD] years) and without (n = 18, mean age: 1.6 ± 1.8 [SD] years) navigator gating were analysed retrospectively. The respiratory motion of the right hemidiaphragm was recorded and correlated to age, weight, body surface area and qualitative image quality on a 4-point score. Quantitative image quality assessment was performed (sharpness of the delineation of the ventricular septal wall) as well as a matched-pair comparison between navigator-gated and non-gated data sets. RESULTS: No significant differences were found in overall image quality or in the sharpness of the ventricular septal wall between gated and non-gated scans. A navigator acceptance of >80% was frequently found in patients ages <12 months, body surface area <0.40 m(2), body weight <10 kg and a size of <80 cm. CONCLUSION: Sequences without respiratory gating may be used in newborns and small infants, in particular if age <12 months, body surface area <0.40 m(2), body weight <10 kg and height <80 cm.
Authors: Thomas Sangild Sørensen; Hermann Körperich; Gerald F Greil; Joachim Eichhorn; Peter Barth; Hans Meyer; Erik Morre Pedersen; Philipp Beerbaum Journal: Circulation Date: 2004-06-21 Impact factor: 29.690
Authors: M V McConnell; V C Khasgiwala; B J Savord; M H Chen; M L Chuang; R R Edelman; W J Manning Journal: AJR Am J Roentgenol Date: 1997-05 Impact factor: 3.959
Authors: Michael Fenchel; Gerald F Greil; Petros Martirosian; Ulrich Kramer; Fritz Schick; Claus D Claussen; Ludger Sieverding; Stephan Miller Journal: Pediatr Radiol Date: 2006-09-28