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Fat-suppressed MR of the orbit and cavernous sinus: comparison of fast spin-echo and conventional spin-echo.
- Source :
-
AJNR. American journal of neuroradiology [AJNR Am J Neuroradiol] 1994 Oct; Vol. 15 (9), pp. 1707-14. - Publication Year :
- 1994
-
Abstract
- Purpose: To compare T2-weighted fat-suppressed fast spin-echo imaging with fat-suppressed conventional spin-echo imaging in the detection of normal intraorbital and pericavernous anatomy and orbital disease, and to determine the efficacy of fat saturation with T2-weighted fast spin-echo imaging of the cavernous sinus.<br />Methods: Contrast-to-noise ratios of normal intraorbital anatomy were calculated and compared in 10 consecutive patients using fat-suppressed fast spin-echo and conventional spin-echo T2-weighted images. Contrast-to-noise ratios of common intraorbital lesions were calculated and compared using fat-suppressed fast spin-echo and fat-suppressed conventional spin-echo. Qualitative evaluation was performed and compared for normal intraorbital anatomy using both fat-suppressed fast spin-echo and fat-suppressed conventional spin-echo in 16 patients. Qualitative evaluation for the detection of normal anatomic structures of the pericavernous region was performed and compared using fast spin-echo with and without fat suppression and fat-suppressed conventional spin-echo T2-weighted images in 16 patients. Fat saturation was performed using standard commercially available chemical saturation technique.<br />Results: Reduced imaging time allowed more acquisitions for fat-suppressed fast spin-echo images, which significantly improved visibility of intraorbital and pericavernous anatomy over fat-suppressed conventional spin-echo. Anatomic visibility was also improved because of reduced motion, phase encoding, and susceptibility artifacts. There was no significant difference between contrast-to-noise ratios for fat-suppressed fast spin-echo and fat-suppressed conventional spin-echo imaging of the lateral and medial rectus muscles. Contrast-to-noise ratios of fat suppressed fast spin-echo of orbital disease was significantly greater than contrast-to-noise ratios of fat-suppressed conventional spin-echo. Detection of several normal anatomic structures of the pericavernous region was significantly improved with non-fat-suppressed fast spin-echo over fat-suppressed fast spin-echo because of significantly reduced magnetic susceptibility artifact.<br />Conclusions: Fat-suppressed fast spin-echo is superior to fat-suppressed conventional spin-echo for T2-weighted orbital imaging. Non-fat-suppressed fast spin-echo is the preferred pulse sequence for T2-weighted imaging of the cavernous sinus because of the minimal susceptibility artifact.
- Subjects :
- Adipose Tissue pathology
Artifacts
Cranial Nerve Neoplasms diagnosis
Diagnosis, Differential
Glioma diagnosis
Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis diagnosis
Hemangioma diagnosis
Humans
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
Meningeal Neoplasms diagnosis
Meningioma diagnosis
Optic Nerve Diseases diagnosis
Optic Neuritis diagnosis
Reference Values
Cavernous Sinus pathology
Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
Orbital Diseases diagnosis
Orbital Neoplasms diagnosis
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0195-6108
- Volume :
- 15
- Issue :
- 9
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- AJNR. American journal of neuroradiology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 7847218