| Literature DB >> 35204348 |
Federico Mazzacane1,2, Valentina Mazzoleni3,4, Elisa Scola5, Sara Mancini5, Ivano Lombardo5, Giorgio Busto5, Elisa Rognone6, Anna Pichiecchio2,6, Alessandro Padovani3,4, Andrea Morotti4, Enrico Fainardi7.
Abstract
Cerebrovascular diseases are a leading cause of disability and death worldwide. The definition of stroke etiology is mandatory to predict outcome and guide therapeutic decisions. The diagnosis of pathological processes involving intracranial arteries is especially challenging, and the visualization of intracranial arteries' vessel walls is not possible with routine imaging techniques. Vessel wall magnetic resonance imaging (VW-MRI) uses high-resolution, multiparametric MRI sequences to directly visualize intracranial arteries walls and their pathological alterations, allowing a better characterization of their pathology. VW-MRI demonstrated a wide range of clinical applications in acute cerebrovascular disease. Above all, it can be of great utility in the differential diagnosis of atherosclerotic and non-atherosclerotic intracranial vasculopathies. Additionally, it can be useful in the risk stratification of intracranial atherosclerotic lesions and to assess the risk of rupture of intracranial aneurysms. Recent advances in MRI technology made it more available, but larger studies are still needed to maximize its use in daily clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: atherosclerosis; cerebrovascular disease; dissection; intracranial vasculopathy; stroke; vasculitis; vessel wall MRI
Year: 2022 PMID: 35204348 PMCID: PMC8871392 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12020258
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Principal magnetic resonance sequences used for vessel wall magnetic resonance imaging (VW-MRI).
| MR Sequences | Technical Requirements | Contrast | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| T1-weighted (or PD) sequence | High spatial resolution; multiplanar 2D or 3D acquisition; blood and CSF signal suppression | Before and after Gd iv administration | Depiction of VW enhancement |
| T2-weighted sequence | High spatial resolution; multiplanar 2D acquisition | No need of Gd iv administration | Additional; usually acquired in cases of suspected atherosclerosis |
| MRA | Extended brain coverage; MIP reconstructions. | With or without Gd iv administration | Depiction of the site of vascular pathology; consider CEMRA in case of severe arterial narrowing or dilation |
PD: proton density; CSF: cerebrospinal fluid; Gd: gadolinium; i.v.: intravenous; VW: vessel wall; MRA: magnetic resonance angiography; MIP: maximum intensity projection; CEMRA: contrast enhanced MRA; T1-w: T1-weighted.
Characteristics of atheromatic plaque components on different VW-MRI sequences [3,31].
| Plaque Component | 3D TOF | T1W | T2W | PD | GdT1W | Clinical |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fibrotic tissue (1) | Iso | Iso/Hyper | Iso/Hyper | Iso/Hyper | Yes | Thin/ruptured FC is associated with higher risk of stroke |
| Lipid core (2) | Iso | Iso/Hyper | Hypo | Iso/Hyper | No | Increasing LRNC is associated with FC rupture, and plaque vulnerability |
| Calcifications (3) | Hypo | Hypo | Hypo | Hypo | No | |
| Hemorrhage (4) | ||||||
| Acute (<1 week) | Hyper | Hyper | Iso/Hypo | Iso/Hypo | No | IPH is associated |
| Subacute (1–6 weeks) | Hyper | Hyper | Hyper | Hyper | No | to plaque progression |
| Chronic (>6 weeks) | Hypo | Hypo | Hypo | Hypo | No | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
3D-TOF: 3D-time of flight; T1W: T1 weighted; T2W: T2 weighted; Gd: gadolinium; Hyper: hyperintense; Hypo: hypointense; FC: fibrous cap (1); w: weeks; LRNC: lipid-rich necrotic core (2); IPH: intraplaque hemorrhage (4); calcifications (3).
Main VWMRI findings in intracranial vasculopathies.
| Vasculitis | Atherosclerosis | RCVS | IAD | MMD | A-MMS | V-MMS | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Thickened, concentric. | Thickened eccentric. | Thickened concentric. | Thickened eccentric with signal characteristic of blood products (intramural hematoma). | Thickened or normal. | Thickened, concentric. | Thickened, eccentric. |
|
| Vivid, concentric, homogeneous. | Variable, present in active plaques; eccentric. | Absent or mild concentric. | Focal enhancement +/− | Absent or mild concentric (the latter associated with subsequent ischemic or hemorrhagic events). | Variable, present in active plaques; eccentric. | Vivid, concentric, homogeneous. |
|
| Stenosis, often multifocal. | Variable degree of stenosis; may present with positive vessel remodeling without stenosis. | Multifocal stenosis, reversible, posterior circulation often involved. | Luminal stenosis with associated dilatation of outer arterial wall diameter. | Progressive stenosis of ICA and proximal MCA. | Like MMD, concomitant atherosclerotic stenosis of other intracranial vessels may be present. | Like MMD but may involve other vessels atypical for MMD. |
RCVS: Reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome; IAD: intracranial artery dissection; MMD: Moyamoya disease; V-MMS: vasculitic Moyamoya syndrome; A-MMS: atherosclerotic Moyamoya syndrome; ICA: intracranial carotid artery; MCA: middle cerebral artery.
Figure 1VWMRI findings in CNS vasculopathies. TOF-MRA of a patient with PACNS and recurrent ischemic strokes shows stenosis of M1 segment of MCA (panel (A), white arrow) with corresponding vivid concentric enhancement of arterial walls in post contrast in T1W black blood sequence (panel (B), white arrows) (* contralateral normal M1 segment). After treatment with intravenous high dose methylprednisolone and cyclophosphamide bolus, contrast enhancement was markedly reduced (panel (D), white arrows) with stable MRA findings (panel (C), white arrow). The patients had no recurrence of stroke during follow-up. MRA and VW-MRI findings of a patient with COVID19-associated cryptogenic ischemic stroke demonstrated stenosis of ACA (panel (E), white arrow) with corresponding contrast enhancement on VW-MRI (panel (F), white arrow). MRA of a patient with syphilitic CNS vasculitis revealed multifocal arterial lumen irregularities (panel (G), white arrows) and VW-MRI demonstrated multifocal enhancement of correspondent MCA segments (panel (H), white arrows). CNS: central nervous system; TOF: time of flight; MRA: magnetic resonance angiography; PACNS: primary angiitis of the CNS; MCA: middle cerebral artery; T1W: T1 weighted; VWMRI: vessel wall MRI; COVID19: Coronavirus disease 2019.
Pitfalls for the interpretation of VW-MRI. The causes of pitfalls, the site where pitfalls are more frequently encountered, and the possible solutions are listed.
| Pitfalls | Causes | Common Site of Artifact | Improvements |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conditions that may mimic atherosclerotic plaque or VW thickening | Incomplete blood flow suppression at T1w-images | Curved and large diameter vessels (genu of petrous ICA; cavernous segments of ICA); proximal or distal to a stenosis; laminar blood flow close to the VW | Acquisition of VW T1 sequences in multiples planes to increase the number of vessel segments parallel to the frequency-encoding direction to improve blood signal suppression |
| Flow artifacts at MRA | Curved and large diameter vessels (genu of petrous ICA; cavernous segments of ICA); proximal or distal to a stenosis | Acquisition of CEMRA to demonstrate proper lumen patency | |
| Conditions that may mimic inflammatory VW enhancement | Parenchymal enhancement of subacute ischemic stroke | Intraparenchymal vessels | DWI helps in depicting the area of ischemia |
| Microhemorrhages with surrounding inflammatory response | Intraparenchymal vessels | SWI and 3D imaging help to distinguish the single dot of hypointensity of the microbleed from the linear hypointensity of the vessel lumen. | |
| Enhancement of the vasa vasorum or of vascular venous plexus | Arteries at their entry in the intracranial compartment, petrous segment of the internal carotid artery and V4 segment of the vertebral artery | 3D multiplanar reconstructions parallel to long axis of the vessel or 2D perpendicular to short-axis section of the vessel for higher-spatial resolution to delineate the enhancement from vascular plexus | |
| Leptomeningeal enhancement | Pial vessels | Multiple oblique planes of reconstruction of 3D VW images may clarify the distribution of the enhancement. | |
| Conditions that may mask inflammatory VW enhancement | Use of steroid | Any vessels | MR scan acquisition before the start of steroid therapy |
| Inadequate delay after Gd administration | Any vessels | Acquisition of VW images at least 5 min after Gd administration |
PD: proton density; CSF: cerebrospinal fluid; Gd: gadolinium; i.v.: intravenous; VW: vessel wall; MRA: magnetic resonance angiography; MIP: maximum intensity projection; CEMRA: contrast enhanced MRA; T1-w: T1-weighted; ICA: internal carotid artery; DWI: diffusion weighted imaging; SWI: susceptibility weighted imaging.