| Literature DB >> 31823831 |
Christin Röttiger1, Maren Hellige2, Bernhard Ohnesorge2, Astrid Bienert-Zeit2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of cadavers for radiology research methodologies involving subjective image quality evaluation of anatomical criteria is well-documented. The purpose of this method comparison study was to evaluate the image quality of dental and adjacent structures in computed tomography (CT) and high-field (3 T) magnetic resonance (MR) images in cadaveric heads, based on an objective four-point rating scale. Whilst CT is a well-established technique, MR imaging (MRI) is rarely used for equine dental diagnostics. The use of a grading system in this study allowed an objective assessment of CT and MRI advantages in portraying equine cheek teeth. As imaging is commonly performed with cadaveric or frozen and thawed heads for dental research investigations, the second objective was to quantify the impact of the specimens' conditions (in vivo, post-mortem, frozen-thawed) on the image quality in CT and MRI.Entities:
Keywords: CT; Cheek teeth; Equine dental imaging; High-field magnetic resonance imaging; Horse; Periodontal ligament; Scoring system
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31823831 PMCID: PMC6905104 DOI: 10.1186/s13028-019-0495-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Scand ISSN: 0044-605X Impact factor: 1.695
Fig. 1Flow chart illustrating the study design. CT computed tomography, MRI magnetic resonance imaging. *Horses of group B and C were the same
Evaluated structures depicted in imaging techniques and image alignments
| Structures evaluated | Imaging techniques (alignments) |
|---|---|
| Dental tissues | |
| Pulp | CT (MPR), PDw (dorsal), PD SPAIR (transverse), T2w (transverse, dorsal) |
| Common pulp chamber | CT (MPR), PDw (dorsal), T2w (dorsal) |
| Dental hard tissues (enamel, dentine and cementum), alveolar part | CT (MPR), PDw (dorsal), PD SPAIR (transverse), T2w (transverse, dorsal |
| Dental hard tissues (enamel, dentine and cementum), clinical crown | CT (MPR), PD SPAIR (transverse), T2w (transverse, dorsal) |
| Periodontal tissues | |
| Periodontal ligament | CT (MPR), PDw (dorsal), PD SPAIR (transverse), T2w (transverse, dorsal) |
| Lamina dura of the maxillary bone | CT (MPR), PDw (dorsal), PD SPAIR (transverse), T2w (transverse, dorsal) |
| Adjacent tissues | |
| Cortical bone of the maxillary sinus | CT (MPR), PDw (dorsal), PD SPAIR (transverse), T2w (transverse, dorsal) |
| Mucosa of the maxillary sinus | CT (MPR), PDw (dorsal), PD SPAIR (transverse), T2w (transverse, dorsal) |
| Bony infra-orbital canal | CT (MPR), PD SPAIR (transverse), T2w (transverse) |
| Soft tissue inside the infra-orbital canal | CT (MPR), PD SPAIR (transverse), T2w (transverse) |
CT computed tomography, MPR multiplanar reconstruction, PDw proton-density weighted, PD SPAIR proton-density weighted spectral attenuated inversion recovery, T2w T2 weighted
Modified scoring system for image quality parameters, according to [18]
| Score | Image noise | Image sharpness | Image contrast |
|---|---|---|---|
0 Poor quality… | … with very high image noise level or image quality highly impaired due to image noise | … due to low image sharpness | … due to low image contrast |
1 Moderate quality … | … with high image noise level or image quality impaired due to image noise | … due to moderate image sharpness | … due to moderate image contrast |
2 Satisfactory quality … | … with moderate image noise level or image quality slightly impaired due to image noise | … due to satisfactory image sharpness | … due to satisfactory image contrast |
3 Good quality … | … without image noise or image quality impaired due to image noise | … due to high image sharpness | … due to high image contrast |
Modified scoring system for the visibility/distinction of anatomical structures, according to [18]
| Score | Criteria for visibility of anatomical structures: Structures … | Criteria for tissue or contour distinction (differentiation): Contours…/Tissues… |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | … not visible | … not distinguishable |
| 1 | … poorly visible, but detectable; identified by its location and signal intensity, not by margins, shape or size | … distinguishable, but often blurred |
| 2 | … clearly identified by its location, signal intensity and shape, margins not clearly delineated | … well distinguished and seldom blurred |
| 3 | … very well visualized and clearly delineated by location, shape, signal intensity/density, size and margins | … very well distinguished and sharply defined |
Fig. 2Graded visibility and differentiation of dental tissues comparing CT and MRI post-mortem (group A). Horizontal whiskers represent statistically significant differences between scores. Boxes represent the interquartile range and vertical whiskers the range. CT computed tomography, PDw proton-density weighted, PD SPAIR proton-density weighted spectral attenuated inversion recovery, T2w T2 weighted
Fig. 3Graded visibility and differentiation of periodontal tissues comparing CT and MRI post-mortem (group A). Horizontal whiskers represent statistically significant differences between scores. Boxes represent the interquartile range and vertical whiskers the range. CT computed tomography, PDw proton-density weighted, PD SPAIR proton-density weighted spectral attenuated inversion recovery, T2w T2 weighted
Fig. 4Graded visibility and differentiation of adjacent tissues comparing CT and MRI post-mortem (group A). Horizontal whiskers represent statistically significant differences between scores. Boxes represent the interquartile range and vertical whiskers the range. CT computed tomography, PDw proton-density weighted, PD SPAIR proton-density weighted spectral attenuated inversion recovery, T2w T2 weighted
Fig. 5Dental, periodontal and adjacent structures evaluated. Transversal CT scan (a), T2w (b) and dorsal PDw (c) MRI sequences post-mortem (group A). 1 = pulp; 2 = intra-alveolar part of the dental hard tissues; 2′ = extra-alveolar part of the dental hard tissues; 3 = soft tissue inside the infra-orbital canal; thick arrows = periodontal ligament; arrowheads = cortical alveolar bone; thin arrows = cortical maxillary bone; curved arrows = sinus’ mucosa
Fig. 6Graded MRI visibility in horses alive (group B), post-mortem (group A) and frozen-thawed (group C). Horizontal whiskers show statistically significant differences between scores. Boxes represent the interquartile range and vertical whiskers the range. MRI magnetic resonance imaging, PDL periodontal ligament
Fig. 7MRI findings in the same horse alive (a, group B) and post-mortem (b, group A). Both images display transversal T2w scans of a 209 (cheek tooth) and the periodontal structures. Arrows show the hyperintense sinus mucosa (a). Image noise is visible as hyperintense, cloudy signal within the hypointense sinus and the dental hard tissues (a) due to small patient’s movements. Arrowheads reveal thickened hyperintense mucosa (b) in the horse post-mortem
Inter-rater agreement with weighted Kappa (wk) for each modality (P < 0.0001)
| Modality | Raters compared | All raters | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rater 1/2 | Rater 1/3 | Rater 2/3 | |||
| CT | wk | 0.7750 | 0.8517 | 0.8695 | 0.7043 |
| PDw | wk | 0.7330 | 0.8135 | 0.8606 | 0.6921 |
| PD SPAIR | wk | 0.7495 | 0.8297 | 0.8841 | 0.7101 |
| T2w | wk | 0.6833 | 0.7921 | 0.8376 | 0.5953 |
CT computed tomography, PDw proton-density weighted, PD SPAIR proton-density weighted spectral attenuated inversion recovery, T2w T2 weighted
Fig. 8CT findings in the same horse alive (a, group B) and frozen-thawed (b, group C). Both images display transversal CT scans of a 109 (cheek tooth) and the periodontal structures. Arrows show the hyperdense thickened sinus mucosa in the head frozen-thawed (b)