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Efficient flow suppressed MRI improves interscan reproducibility of carotid atherosclerosis plaque burden measurements
Authors:Li Dong MD  Jinnan Wang PhD  Vasily L Yarnykh PhD  Hunter R Underhill MD  Moni B Neradilek PhD  Nayak Polissar PhD  Thomas S Hatsukami MD  Chun Yuan PhD
Institution:1. Department of Radiology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA;2. Clinical Sites Research Program, Philips Research North America, Briarcliff Manor, New York, USA;3. The Mountain‐Whisper‐Light Statistical Consulting, Seattle, Washington, USA;4. Department of Surgery, University of Washington, Seattle Washington, USA
Abstract:

Purpose:

To determine if better flow suppression can meaningfully improve the reproducibility of measurements associated with carotid atherosclerotic disease, particularly for lumen and wall areas.

Materials and Methods:

Eighteen subjects with carotid artery stenosis identified by duplex ultrasound (11 with 16%–49% stenosis; 7 with 50%–79% stenosis) underwent two carotid magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examinations on a 3T scanner with a 4‐channel phased array coil. High‐resolution intermediate‐weighted TSE (TR/TE = 4000/8.5 msec, 0.55 mm in‐plane resolution, 2 mm slice thickness, 16 slices, 3‐minute scan time) with two different flow‐suppression techniques (multislice double inversion recovery mDIR] and motion‐sensitized driven‐equilibrium MSDE]) were obtained separately. For each subject, bilateral arteries were reviewed. One radiologist blinded to timepoints, flow suppression techniques, and clinical information measured the arterial lumen area, wall area, and total vessel wall area.

Results:

Compared to mDIR, the MSDE technique had a smaller interscan standard deviation (SD) in lumen (SD: 3.6 vs. 5.2 mm2, P = 0.02), wall area measurements (SD: 4.5 vs. 6.4 mm2, P = 0.02), and a trend towards smaller SD in total vessel area measurement (SD: 4.4 vs. 4.9 mm2, P = 0.07).

Conclusion:

The results from this study demonstrate that vessel wall imaging could quantify atherosclerotic plaque measurements more reliably with an improved blood suppression technique. This relationship between flow‐suppression efficiency and reproducibility of plaque measurements is important, as more reliable area measurements will be useful in clinical diagnosis and in serial MRI studies that monitor carotid atherosclerotic lesion progression and regression. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2010;32:452–458. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Keywords:vessel wall MRI  reproducibility  MSDE  mDIR
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