Literature DB >> 4033378

Magnetic resonance of brain tumors: considerations of imaging contrast on the basis of relaxation measurements.

F Q Ngo, J W Bay, R J Kurland, M A Weinstein, J F Hahn, B J Glassner, C A Woolley, A W Dudley, C M Ferrario, T F Meaney.   

Abstract

Proton spin-lattice and spin-spin relaxation times have been measured in surgically-removed normal CNS tissues and a variety of tumors of the brain. All measurements were made at 20 MHz and 37 degrees C. Between grey and white matter from autopsy human or canine specimens significant differences in T1 or T2 were observed, with greater differences seen in T1. Such discrimination was reduced in samples obtained from live brain-tumor patients due to lengthening in T1 and T2 of white matter near tumorous lesions. Edematous white matter showed T1 and T2 values higher than those of autopsy disease-free white matter. Compared to normal CNS tissues, most brain tumors examined in this study demonstrated elevated T1 and T2 values. Exceptions, however, did exist. No definitive correlation was indicated on a T1 or T2 basis which allowed a distinction to be made between benign and malignant states. Furthermore, considerable variation in relaxation times occurred from tumor to tumor of the same type, suggesting that within a tumor type there are important differences in physiology, biology, and/or pathologic state. Such variation caused partial overlap in relaxation times among certain tumor types and hence may limit the capability of magnetic resonance imaging (MR) alone for the diagnosis of specific disease. Nonetheless, this study predicts that on the basis of T1 or T2 differences most brain tumors are readily detectable by MR via saturation recovery or inversion recovery with appropriate selections of pulse-spacing parameters. In general, tumors can be discriminated against white matter better than grey matter and contrast between glioma and grey matter is usually superior to that between meningioma and grey matter. This work did not consider tissue-associated proton density which should be addressed together with T1 and T2 for a complete treatment of MR contrast.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1985        PMID: 4033378     DOI: 10.1016/0730-725x(85)90251-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Magn Reson Imaging        ISSN: 0730-725X            Impact factor:   2.546


  7 in total

1.  Fast radio-frequency enforced steady state (FRESS) spin echo MRI for quantitative T2 mapping: minimizing the apparent repetition time (TR) dependence for fast T2 measurement.

Authors:  Jerry S Cheung; Enfeng Wang; XiaoAn Zhang; Emiri Mandeville; Eng H Lo; A Gregory Sorensen; Phillip Zhe Sun
Journal:  NMR Biomed       Date:  2011-07-14       Impact factor: 4.044

2.  Quantitative Synthetic Magnetic Resonance Imaging for Brain Metastases: A Feasibility Study.

Authors:  Amaresha Shridhar Konar; Akash Deelip Shah; Ramesh Paudyal; Maggie Fung; Suchandrima Banerjee; Abhay Dave; Vaios Hatzoglou; Amita Shukla-Dave
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-27       Impact factor: 6.575

3.  Characterization of brain tumours with spin-spin relaxation: pilot case study reveals unique T 2 distribution profiles of glioblastoma, oligodendroglioma and meningioma.

Authors:  Cornelia Laule; Thorarin A Bjarnason; Irene M Vavasour; Anthony L Traboulsee; G R Wayne Moore; David K B Li; Alex L MacKay
Journal:  J Neurol       Date:  2017-09-11       Impact factor: 4.849

4.  Variation of the magnetic relaxation rate 1/T1 of water protons with magnetic field strength (NMRD profile) of untreated, non-calcified, human astrocytomas: correlation with histology and solids content.

Authors:  M Spiller; S S Kasoff; T A Lansen; S Rifkinson-Mann; M P Valsamis; S H Koenig; M S Tenner
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  1994       Impact factor: 4.130

5.  Maturational and aging effects on human brain apparent transverse relaxation.

Authors:  Jianli Wang; Michele L Shaffer; Paul J Eslinger; Xiaoyu Sun; Christopher W Weitekamp; Megha M Patel; Deborah Dossick; David J Gill; James R Connor; Qing X Yang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-02-21       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Body composition, adipokines, FGF23-Klotho and bone in kidney transplantation: Is there a link?

Authors:  Anca Matei; Stefana Catalina Bilha; Daniela Constantinescu; Mariana Pavel-Tanasa; Petru Cianga; Adrian Covic; Dumitru D Branisteanu
Journal:  J Nephrol       Date:  2021-02-09       Impact factor: 3.902

7.  Value of quantitative magnetic resonance imaging T1-relaxometry in predicting contrast-enhancement in glioblastoma patients.

Authors:  Elke Hattingen; Andreas Müller; Martin Glas; Sied Kebir; Alina Jurcoane; Burkhard Mädler; Philip Ditter; Hans Schild; Ulrich Herrlinger
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-06-27
  7 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.