| Literature DB >> 35628923 |
Thilo Rusche1, Hanns-Christian Breit1, Michael Bach1, Jakob Wasserthal1, Julian Gehweiler1, Sebastian Manneck1, Johanna Maria Lieb1, Gian Marco De Marchis2, Marios Nikos Psychogios1, Peter B Sporns1,3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Ischemic stroke is a leading cause of mortality and acquired disability worldwide and thus plays an enormous health-economic role. Imaging of choice is computed-tomographic (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), especially diffusion-weighted (DW) sequences. However, MR imaging is associated with high costs and therefore has a limited availability leading to low-field-MRI techniques increasingly coming into focus. Thus, the aim of our study was to assess the potential of stroke imaging with low-field MRI.Entities:
Keywords: low-field MRI; reading study; scanner comparison; stroke imaging
Year: 2022 PMID: 35628923 PMCID: PMC9147033 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11102798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Figure 1Workflow of patient selection and data acquisition.
Scan protocols, Siemens MAGNETOM Avanto FIT 1.5 T and Siemens MAGNETOM FreeMax 0.55 T.
| Siemens MAGNETOM FreeMax 0.55 T | Siemens MAGNETOM Avanto Fit 1.5 T | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Field strength in T | 0.55 | 1.5 |
| FOV (field of view) in mm2 | 209 × 230 | 187 × 230 |
| ST (slice thickness) in mm | 3 | 3 |
| SS (slice spacing) | 3.6 | 3.6 |
| Number of slices | 40 | 40 |
| PS (pixel spacing) in mm2 | 1.28 × 1.03 | 0.9 × 0.9 |
| TR (repetition time) in msec | 7780 | 8510 |
| TE (echo time) in msec | 96 | 112 |
| TI (inversion delay) in msec | 2368.8 | 2460 |
| Turbo Factor | 15 | 19 |
| TA (time of acquisition) in min | 5:28 | 3:26 |
| BW (Bandwidth) | 150 | 130 |
|
| ||
| Field strength in T | 0.55 | 1.5 |
| Sequence type | Multi shot 3D EPI | 3D FLASH |
| FOV (field of view) in mm2 | 201 × 230 | 194 × 230 |
| ST (slice thickness) in mm | 3 | 3 |
| Number of slices | 40 | 48 |
| PS (pixel spacing) in mm2 | 0.94 × 0.8 | 1.12 × 0.9 |
| TR (repetition time) in msec | 172 | 48 |
| TE (echo time) in msec | 100 | 40 |
| Parallel imaging | - | GRAPPA factor 2 |
| TA (time of acquisition) in min | 2:23 | 2:17 |
| BW (Bandwidth) | 276 | 80 |
|
| ||
| Field strength in T | 0.55 | 1.5 |
| FOV (field of view) in mm2 | 220 × 220 | 230 × 230 |
| ST (slice thickness) in mm | 3 | 3 |
| SS (slice spacing) | 3.6 | 3.6 |
| Number of slices | 40 | 40 |
| PS (pixel spacing) in mm2 | 1.67 × 1.67 | 1.44 × 1.44 |
| b values in s/mm2 | 0, 1000 | 0, 1000 |
| TR (repetition time) in msec | 7400 | 6200 |
| TE (echo time) in msec | 102 | 103 |
| Parallel imaging | GRAPPA factor 2 | GRAPPA factor 2 |
| TA (time of acquisition) in min | 4:35 | 2:04 |
| BW (Bandwidth) | 842 | 1490 |
Figure 2Workflow of data processing.
Detailed patient data.
| Patient | Patient Age | Neurological Symptoms at Admission | NIHSS | Control-Group (C), Stroke-Cohort (S) | Final Radiological Report | Time Gap between Scans in min | Time Gap between Onset and Scan 1 in min |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | 87 | facial droop, dysarthria, hemiparesis right side | 3 | S | acute to subacute infarct corpus nuclei caudati and cranial parts of the nucleus lentiformis left side | 46 | 1166 |
| Patient 2 | 88 | ataxic gait and standing | no data | S | acute to subacute infarct lateral pontin left side | 37 | unknown |
| Patient 3 | 82 | visual deficit | no data | S | acute to subacute punctiform infarcts parietal left and cerebellar right | 93 | unknown |
| Patient 4 | 84 | intermittent dysarthria | 1 | S | acute to subacute infarct thalamus left side | 33 | unknown |
| Patient 5 | 58 | facial droop, hemiparesis right side | 10 | S | multiple subacute infarcts posterior circulation on both sides | 40 | 1050 |
| Patient 6 | 65 | low-grade facial paresis left side | 1 | S | acute to subacute infarcts of the thalamus and occipital/occipitotemporal right side | 20 | 1175 |
| Patient 7 | 65 | dysdiadochokinesis right side | no data | S | subacute punctiform infarcts frontal and parietal left side | 24 | 1704 |
| Patient 8 | 75 | facial droop right side | 0 | S | punctiform infarct gyrus postcentralis left side | 22 | 1135 |
| Patient 9 | 82 | confusion | no data | S | acute to subacute infarcts frontal and parietal left side | 32 | unknown |
| Patient 10 | 79 | hemiataxia left side | 2 | S | acute to subacute infarct thalamus right side | 42 | 1492 |
| Patient 11 | 86 | dysarthria, ataxia right leg | 3 | S | acute infarct posterolateral pons left side | 25 | unknown |
| Patient 12 | 83 | leg-emphasized hemiparesis left side | 5 | S | subacute infarct gyrus precentralis right side | 31 | unknown |
| Patient 13 | 89 | visual deficit | 2 | S | acute cortical infarcts parietooccipital and frontal right side | 38 | 2198 |
| Patient 14 | 69 | no data | no data | S | subacute infarct central left side | 42 | unknown |
| Patient 15 | 73 | amaurosis fugax | 0 | C | no stroke | 25 | 1197 |
| Patient 16 | 29 | strong nystagmus to left side, headache right frontal, vertigo | no data | C | no stroke | 48 | unknown |
| Patient 17 | 70 | atypical transient global amnesia | no data | C | no stroke | 44 | unknown |
| Patient 18 | 87 | aphasia | no data | C | no stroke | 32 | unknown |
| Patient 19 | 74 | vertigo | 0 | C | no stroke | 25 | 826 |
| Patient 20 | 60 | aphasia | 0 | C | no stroke | 21 | unknown |
| Patient 21 | 44 | vertigo | 0 | C | no stroke | 49 | unknown |
| Patient 22 | 80 | short-term loss of vision left side | no data | C | no stroke | 35 | 2092 |
| Patient 23 | 84 | vertigo, gait instability | no data | C | no stroke | 48 | 425 |
| Patient 24 | 84 | vertigo, gait instability | no data | C | no stroke | 32 | unknown |
| Patient 25 | 53 | aphasia | 1 | excluded | subacute punctiform infarcts frontal and parietal left side | 916 | 1197 |
| Patient 26 | 59 | transient global amnesia | 0 | excluded | bilateral punctiform diffusion-restrictions of the hippocampus head | 2936 | 1394 |
| Patient 27 | 46 | facial droop, descending arm left side | 2 | excluded | acute to subacute infarct lenticostriatal right side | 2812 | 1406 |
Figure 3Average Likert-scoring reader 1 and 2 DWI/ADC sequences.
Figure 4Average Likert-scoring reader 1 and 2 FLAIR sequences.
Figure 5Left side, axial 1.5 T DWI sequence with sharply hyperintense delineable, punctiform DWI lesion located cortico-subcortical occipital right. On the right side, corresponding 0.55 T axial DWI sequence with the same slice localization without sufficiently detectable lesion.
Figure 6Left side, axial 1.5 T DWI sequence with sharply hyperintense delineable, punctiform DWI lesion located cerebellar right. On the right side, corresponding 0.55 T axial DWI sequence with the same slice localization without sufficiently detectable lesion.
Figure 7Left images from top to bottom axial 1.5 T DWI, ADC and FLAIR sequence with sharply delineated, demarcated, subacute pons infarct on the left. Right side, corresponding axial 0.55 T DWI, ADC and FLAIR sequence at the same slice localization with equivalent infarct morphology and thus identical diagnostic quality.