Thin-section, three-dimensional (3D) gradient-echo magnetic resonance imaging of the coronary arteries was performed without and with retrospective respiratory gating in 12 healthy volunteers and one patient. In all examinations, results were improved with gating. In five of seven volunteer examinations, coronary artery delineation on images reconstructed by using the least-squares method for motion detection with navigator echoes was found to be equal to that obtained by using edge detection. Images in five other volunteers covered the entire heart with multiple overlapping 3D slabs. The arteries were segmented from the background and could be viewed from any orientation. The lengths of contiguously visible vessels were as follows: left main coronary artery, 11.5 mm +/- 0.4 (mean +/- standard deviation); left anterior descending branch, 115.9 mm +/- 19.7; left circumflex branch, 97.2 mm +/- 12.5; and right coronary artery, 125.9 mm +/- 18.8. This respiratory gating technique clearly improved depiction of the coronary arteries.
The purpose of this study was to examine the differential myocardial signal responses due to the blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) effect in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) under differing conditions of myocardial oxygen supply and demand. The signal response was measured when myocardial blood flow was increased in excess of oxygen demand or when flow was increased in response to increased myocardial oxygen demand. Normal volunteers were studied using a segmented, interleaved, double-echo, gradient-echo sequence at baseline conditions and during pharmacological stress with either dipyridamole (n = 5) or dobutamine (n = 6). Changes in T2* in the myocardium during stress were calculated. Peak coronary flow velocity was measured at rest and during stress using a breath-hold phase contrast technique. Administration of dipyridamole induced a 124 +/- 27% increase in coronary blood flow which resulted in a 46 +/- 22% increase in T2*, consistent with a decrease in myocardial venous deoxyhemoglobin concentration as myocardial oxygen supply exceeds demand. In contrast, the administration of dobutamine resulted in a 41 +/- 25% increase in coronary blood flow but no significant change in T2* (-5 +/- 19%), consistent with a lack of change in myocardial venous deoxyhemoglobin concentration and balanced oxygen supply and demand. Thus, alterations in the relationship between myocardial oxygen supply and demand appear to be detectable using BOLD MRI.
Detection of local or regional metastases to lymph nodes is clinically important in virtually any type of primary tumor. Current imaging techniques rely heavily on the size criterion for characterization of nodal disease. However, size can be an ineffective parameter for diagnosis of tumor spread to lymph nodes. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging performed before and after administration of ferumoxtran-10 is a promising technique for characterization of lymph nodes in patients with various primary tumors. Normal homogeneous uptake of ferumoxtran-10 in nonmetastatic nodes shortens the T2 and T2*, turning these nodes dark, whereas malignant nodes lack uptake and remain hyperintense. To optimize acquisition strategies, the following factors should be considered: the timing of contrast material-enhanced imaging, the section thickness, the imaging plane, and the imaging parameters for T2*-weighted sequences. In addition, MR imaging with ferumoxtran-10 allows presurgical mapping of lymph nodes and quantitative estimation of T2*.
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