| Literature DB >> 35366709 |
Luigi Cirillo1,2,3, Arianna Rustici1,4, Francesco Toni2, Matteo Zoli1,5, Fiorina Bartiromo1,3, Laura Ludovica Gramegna1,3, Domenico Cicala6, Caterina Tonon1,3, Ferdinando Caranci7, Raffaele Lodi1.
Abstract
Vessel Wall MRI (VW-MRI) is an emerging MR sequence used for diagnosis, characterization, and treatment planning of cerebrovascular diseases. Although VW-MRI is not yet routinely used, most papers have emphasized its role in several aspects of the management of cerebrovascular diseases. Nowadays, no VW-MRI sequence optimized for the intracranial imaging is commercially available, thus the Spin Echo sequences are the more effective sequences for this purpose. Moreover, as one of the principal technical requirements for intracranial VW-MR imaging is to achieve both the suppression of blood in vessel lumen and of the outer cerebrospinal fluid, different suppression techniques have been developed. This short report provides the technical parameters of our VW-MR sequence developed over 3-years' experience.Entities:
Keywords: 3 Tesla MRI; Intracranial aneurysm; RCVS; Vasculitis; Vessel Wall Imagin
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35366709 PMCID: PMC9130152 DOI: 10.1007/s11547-022-01484-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Med ISSN: 0033-8362 Impact factor: 6.313
Vessel Wall MRI sequence parameters at our Institution
| Acquisition time | 7:10 min |
|---|---|
| Acquisition orientation | Coronal |
| Type | 3D |
| Slice for slab | 80 |
| Slice oversampling | 10.0% |
| Slice thickness | 0.60 mm |
| FoV read (mm) | 160 mm |
| FoV phase (%) | 82.8% |
| Phase Oversampling | 20% |
| Phase resolution | 100% |
| Voxel size | 0.3 × 0.3 × 0.6 |
| TR (ms) | 1000 ms |
| TE (ms) | 38 ms |
| ETL | 211 ms |
| Flip angle (°) | T1 variable |
| Bandwidth (Hz/pixel) | 514 Hz/Px |
| K-space filling | Interpolation with Zero filling |
| PAT mode | GRAPPA |
| Accel. factor PE | 2 |
| Ref. lines PE | 24 |
| Fat suppression | None |
| Dark blood | Off |
Signal intensity, advantage, and disadvantage of each MR weighting
| T1-w | PD-w | T2-w | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CSF | Dark | Light gray | Bright |
| Blood inside vessels | Bright | Dark | Dark |
| Advantages | High anatomical detail High contrast to Gd Relatively short lead times | High SNR High anatomical detail | High tissue contrast |
| Disadvantages | Low tissue contrast | Reduced contrast enhancement Reduced suppression of CSF | Mid-level anatomical detail Long time standard sequences |
Fig. 1Aneurysms. A 64-year-old woman underwent brain MRI examination for the presence of incidentally discovering of multiple aneurysms, the largest located at left middle cerebral artery bifurcation (E) and at the basilar apex (H). Vessel Wall MRI sequences before (A) and after (B) the contrast medium administration, demonstrate the presence of a focal parietal enhancement after contrast medium of the left middle cerebral artery aneurysm (C, D red arrow, and E), while the basilar apex aneurysms did not show any parietal enhancement after the contrast medium administration (F, G, H). Despite the left bifurcation, MCA aneurysm did not fulfill the dimension criteria for treatment, the presence of wall enhancement let us decide to treat the aneurysm
Fig. 2CNS vasculitis. A 58-year-old man with dizziness, vomiting, and speech disturbance underwent MRI study demonstrating in the TOF sequence, the presence of multiple caliber alterations in the intracranial arterial circulation (A), associated with recent ischemic lesions in the brain tissue (B–D) both in the anterior and in the posterior circulation. The caliber alterations detected in the TOF sequence demonstrated the presence of wall enhancement after the administration of contrast medium (G, J, l), particularly in the left M1 segment of the middle cerebral artery (E, F, G, red arrows), at the basilar artery apex (H, I, J blue arrows) and in the proximal portion of the basilar artery at the level of the right anterior inferior cerebellar artery (H, K, L white arrowheads). The laboratory test demonstrated the positivity for a T. pallidum infection and thus the final diagnosis is a luetic CNS vasculitis
Fig. 3RCVS. A 56-year-old woman presented with an abrupt onset of headache and a CT scan demonstrated the presence of a small amount of subarachnoid hemorrhage in the right posterior parietal sulci (A). Nonvascular lesions responsible for the SAH were detected and thus the patient underwent brain MRI after few days, confirming the presence of a small amount of subarachnoid hemorrhage in the right posterior parietal sulci for the presence of hyperintensity in T2* and FLAIR sequences (B, C white arrowheads). The TOF sequence highlight the presence of caliber alterations in the left M2 segment (D–F, red arrows), and the Vessel Wall MRI study before (G) and after (H) the administration of contrast material demonstrated the presence of a slight circumferential enhancement in correspondence of the left M2 segment stenosis (blue arrows). Few days after the patient underwent a DSA angiography (I) that demonstrated the presence of a more diffuse caliber alterations in the intracranial arterial vasculature. The six months MRI follow-up demonstrates the complete resolution of the enhancement at Vessel Wall study before (J) and after (K) the contrast administration, as well as the caliber alterations (L–N blue arrows). The reversibility of those findings was then suggestive for a Reversible Cerebral Vasoconstriction Syndrome (RCVS), although non-enhancing concentric wall thickenings are more common than enhancing ones