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SHIP-MR and Radiology: 12 Years of Whole-Body Magnetic Resonance Imaging in a Single Center

Authors :
Norbert Hosten
Robin Bülow
Henry Völzke
Martin Domin
Carsten Oliver Schmidt
Alexander Teumer
Till Ittermann
Matthias Nauck
Stephan Felix
Marcus Dörr
Marcello Ricardo Paulista Markus
Uwe Völker
Amro Daboul
Christian Schwahn
Birte Holtfreter
Torsten Mundt
Karl-Friedrich Krey
Stefan Kindler
Maria Mksoud
Stefanie Samietz
Reiner Biffar
Wolfgang Hoffmann
Thomas Kocher
Jean-Francois Chenot
Andreas Stahl
Frank Tost
Nele Friedrich
Stephanie Zylla
Anke Hannemann
Martin Lotze
Jens-Peter Kühn
Katrin Hegenscheid
Christian Rosenberg
Georgi Wassilew
Stefan Frenzel
Katharina Wittfeld
Hans J. Grabe
Marie-Luise Kromrey
Source :
Healthcare, Vol 10, Iss 33, p 33 (2022), Healthcare 10(1), 33 (2022). doi:10.3390/healthcare10010033, Healthcare
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2022.

Abstract

The Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP), a population-based study from a rural state in northeastern Germany with a relatively poor life expectancy, supplemented its comprehensive examination program in 2008 with whole-body MR imaging at 1.5 T (SHIP-MR). We reviewed more than 100 publications that used the SHIP-MR data and analyzed which sequences already produced fruitful scientific outputs and which manuscripts have been referenced frequently. Upon reviewing the publications about imaging sequences, those that used T1-weighted structured imaging of the brain and a gradient-echo sequence for R2* mapping obtained the highest scientific output; regarding specific body parts examined, most scientific publications focused on MR sequences involving the brain and the (upper) abdomen. We conclude that population-based MR imaging in cohort studies should define more precise goals when allocating imaging time. In addition, quality control measures might include recording the number and impact of published work, preferably on a bi-annual basis and starting 2 years after initiation of the study. Structured teaching courses may enhance the desired output in areas that appear underrepresented.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22279032
Volume :
10
Issue :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Healthcare
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....079ef6cb645b9798c732432e3a758ff5