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Quantification of metal‐induced susceptibility artifacts associated with ultrahigh‐field magnetic resonance imaging of spinal implants

Reports on spinal‐implant metallic artifacts in 7‐T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are lacking. Thus, we investigated the magnitude of metal artifacts derived from spinal implants in 7‐T MRI and analyzed the differences obtained with spinal rods manufactured from pure titanium, titanium alloy, and...

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Autores principales: Chiba, Yusuke, Murakami, Hideki, Sasaki, Makoto, Endo, Hirooki, Yamabe, Daisuke, Kinno, Daichi, Doita, Minoru
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6764786/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31572981
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jsp2.1064
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author Chiba, Yusuke
Murakami, Hideki
Sasaki, Makoto
Endo, Hirooki
Yamabe, Daisuke
Kinno, Daichi
Doita, Minoru
author_facet Chiba, Yusuke
Murakami, Hideki
Sasaki, Makoto
Endo, Hirooki
Yamabe, Daisuke
Kinno, Daichi
Doita, Minoru
author_sort Chiba, Yusuke
collection PubMed
description Reports on spinal‐implant metallic artifacts in 7‐T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are lacking. Thus, we investigated the magnitude of metal artifacts derived from spinal implants in 7‐T MRI and analyzed the differences obtained with spinal rods manufactured from pure titanium, titanium alloy, and cobalt‐chrome (5.5‐mm and 6.0‐mm diameters and 50‐mm length). Following the American Society for Testing and Materials guidelines, we measured the artifact size and artifact volume ratio of each rod during image acquisition using 7‐T MRI scanners with three‐dimensional (3D) T1‐weighted and 3D T2* spoiled gradient echo (GRE), 3D T2‐weighted fast spin echo, zero echo time (ZTE), and diffusion‐weighted imaging sequences. Pure titanium and titanium alloy rods yielded significantly smaller artifacts than did cobalt‐chrome rods, with no significant difference between pure titanium and titanium alloy rods. The artifact sizes of the 5.5‐mm and 6.0‐mm diameter rods were similar. The artifact magnitude increased in the following sequence order: ZTE, 3D T2 fast spin echo, 3D T1 spoiled GRE, 3D T2* spoiled GRE, and diffusion‐weighted imaging. Artifacts obtained using the spin echo method were smaller than those obtained with the GRE method. Because the echo time in ZTE is extremely short, the occurrence of artifacts because of image distortion and signal loss caused by differences in magnetic susceptibility is minimal, resulting in the smallest artifacts. ZTE can be a clinically useful method for the postoperative evaluation of patients after instrumentation surgery, even with 7‐T MRI.
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spelling pubmed-67647862019-09-30 Quantification of metal‐induced susceptibility artifacts associated with ultrahigh‐field magnetic resonance imaging of spinal implants Chiba, Yusuke Murakami, Hideki Sasaki, Makoto Endo, Hirooki Yamabe, Daisuke Kinno, Daichi Doita, Minoru JOR Spine Research Articles Reports on spinal‐implant metallic artifacts in 7‐T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are lacking. Thus, we investigated the magnitude of metal artifacts derived from spinal implants in 7‐T MRI and analyzed the differences obtained with spinal rods manufactured from pure titanium, titanium alloy, and cobalt‐chrome (5.5‐mm and 6.0‐mm diameters and 50‐mm length). Following the American Society for Testing and Materials guidelines, we measured the artifact size and artifact volume ratio of each rod during image acquisition using 7‐T MRI scanners with three‐dimensional (3D) T1‐weighted and 3D T2* spoiled gradient echo (GRE), 3D T2‐weighted fast spin echo, zero echo time (ZTE), and diffusion‐weighted imaging sequences. Pure titanium and titanium alloy rods yielded significantly smaller artifacts than did cobalt‐chrome rods, with no significant difference between pure titanium and titanium alloy rods. The artifact sizes of the 5.5‐mm and 6.0‐mm diameter rods were similar. The artifact magnitude increased in the following sequence order: ZTE, 3D T2 fast spin echo, 3D T1 spoiled GRE, 3D T2* spoiled GRE, and diffusion‐weighted imaging. Artifacts obtained using the spin echo method were smaller than those obtained with the GRE method. Because the echo time in ZTE is extremely short, the occurrence of artifacts because of image distortion and signal loss caused by differences in magnetic susceptibility is minimal, resulting in the smallest artifacts. ZTE can be a clinically useful method for the postoperative evaluation of patients after instrumentation surgery, even with 7‐T MRI. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 2019-08-16 /pmc/articles/PMC6764786/ /pubmed/31572981 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jsp2.1064 Text en © 2019 The Authors. JOR Spine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Orthopaedic Research Society This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Chiba, Yusuke
Murakami, Hideki
Sasaki, Makoto
Endo, Hirooki
Yamabe, Daisuke
Kinno, Daichi
Doita, Minoru
Quantification of metal‐induced susceptibility artifacts associated with ultrahigh‐field magnetic resonance imaging of spinal implants
title Quantification of metal‐induced susceptibility artifacts associated with ultrahigh‐field magnetic resonance imaging of spinal implants
title_full Quantification of metal‐induced susceptibility artifacts associated with ultrahigh‐field magnetic resonance imaging of spinal implants
title_fullStr Quantification of metal‐induced susceptibility artifacts associated with ultrahigh‐field magnetic resonance imaging of spinal implants
title_full_unstemmed Quantification of metal‐induced susceptibility artifacts associated with ultrahigh‐field magnetic resonance imaging of spinal implants
title_short Quantification of metal‐induced susceptibility artifacts associated with ultrahigh‐field magnetic resonance imaging of spinal implants
title_sort quantification of metal‐induced susceptibility artifacts associated with ultrahigh‐field magnetic resonance imaging of spinal implants
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6764786/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31572981
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jsp2.1064
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