High contrast cartilaginous endplate imaging using a 3D adiabatic inversion-recovery-prepared fat-saturated ultrashort echo time (3D IR-FS-UTE) sequence.
Alecio F LombardiZhao WeiJonathan WongMichael CarlRoland R LeeMark WallaceKoichi MasudaEric Y ChangJiang DuYa-Jun MaPublished in: NMR in biomedicine (2021)
Ultrashort echo time (UTE) sequences can image tissues with transverse T 2 /T 2 * relaxations too short to be efficiently observed on routine clinical MRI sequences, such as the vertebral body cartilaginous endplate (CEP). Here, we describe a 3D adiabatic inversion-recovery-prepared fat-saturated ultrashort echo time (3D IR-FS-UTE) sequence to highlight the CEP of vertebral bodies in comparison to the intervertebral disc (IVD) and bone marrow fat (BF) at 3 T. The IR-FS-UTE sequence used a 3D UTE sequence combined with an adiabatic IR preparation pulse centered in the middle of the water and fat peaks, while a fat saturation module was used to suppress the signal from fat. A slab-selective half pulse was used for signal excitation, and a 3D center-out cones trajectory was used for more efficient data sampling. The 3D IR-FS-UTE sequence was applied to an ex vivo human spine sample, as well as the spines of six healthy volunteers and of three patients with back pain. Bright continuous lines representing signal from CEP were found in healthy IVDs. The measured contrast-to-noise ratio was 18.5 ± 4.9 between the CEP and BF, and 20.3 ± 4.15 between the CEP and IVD for the six volunteers. Abnormal IVDs showed CEP discontinuity or irregularity in the sample and patient studies. In conclusion, the proposed 3D IR-FS-UTE sequence is feasible for imaging the vertebral body's CEP in vivo with high contrast.
Keyphrases
- contrast enhanced
- adipose tissue
- magnetic resonance
- diffusion weighted
- bone marrow
- fatty acid
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high resolution
- diffusion weighted imaging
- blood pressure
- bone mineral density
- computed tomography
- amino acid
- gene expression
- electronic health record
- mesenchymal stem cells
- postmenopausal women
- case report
- body composition
- clinical practice