Fibrous dysplasia: magnetic resonance imaging appearance at 1.5 tesla |
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Authors: | M A Norris P A Kaplan M Pathria G Greenway |
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Affiliation: | Department of Radiology, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha 68105. |
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Abstract: | Fibrous dysplasia has been described in a small number of cases in the literature as showing low signal intensity on T1- and T2-weighted magnetic resonance images. We reviewed magnetic resonance scans of 13 patients with fibrous dysplasia to determine if there might be a characteristic appearance. All lesions had sharply defined borders and were of intermediate signal intensity on T1-weighted images. With T2 weighting, six lesions (46%) showed high signal intensity, four (31%) showed persistent intermediate signal intensity, and three (23%) showed mixed intermediate and high signal intensity. Ten lesions (77%) had inhomogeneous signal intensity and three (23%) had homogeneous signal intensity. We concluded that fibrous dysplasia does not have a characteristic appearance on magnetic resonance imaging. However, magnetic resonance may be helpful in establishing the diagnosis of fibrous dysplasia if low to intermediate signal intensity is seen on both T1- and T2-weighted images. This situation occurred in 54% of our cases, whereas the other 46% had nonspecific signal characteristics indistinguishable from many other bone lesions. |
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