Frequency of common bile duct motion artifacts caused by inferior vena cava pulsation on magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography. |
| |
Authors: | Satoru Morita Eiko Ueno Naoko Saito Kazufumi Suzuki Haruhiko Machida Mikihiko Fujimura Kazuhiro Maruyama Yugo Onodera Kunihiro Watanabe Takashi Suzuki Takahiro Ohnishi Chiaki Imura Norio Mitsuhashi |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Radiology, Tokyo Women's Medical University, Medical Center East, Tokyo, Japan. i@imodey.com |
| |
Abstract: | PURPOSE: We assessed the frequency of common bile duct (CBD) motion artifacts caused by inferior vena cava (IVC) pulsation on magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP). METHODS: We retrospectively evaluated CBD motion artifacts in 4 MRCP sequences from each of 115 consecutive patients. RESULTS: We observed 37 (32.2%) ghost artifacts at the ventral and dorsal aspects of the CBD on transaxial, half-Fourier acquisition single-shot turbo spin-echo (HASTE-ax) images; no such artifacts were observed on transaxial T(2)-weighted turbo spin-echo images. In 10 patients, we observed 9 (7.8%) pseudo-defects of the CBD on 3-dimensional T(2)-weighted turbo spin-echo with navigator-triggered prospective acquisition correction technique MRCP and 6 (5.2%) pseudo-defects on single-shot rapid acquisition with relaxation enhancement MRCP. Pseudo-defects were significantly more frequent in patients with ghost artifacts than without (9 of 37 [24.3%] versus one of 78 [1.3%]; P<0.01, McNemar test). CONCLUSION: Although uncommon, pseudo-defects of the CBD caused by IVC pulsation are observed on MRCP. MRCP interpretation that includes comparison with HASTE-ax images can diminish the potential misinterpretation of such CBD motion artifact as bile duct tumor or biliary stone. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|