Sensitivity and reproducibility of fast-FLAIR, FSE, and TGSE sequences for the MRI assessment of brain lesion load in multiple sclerosis: A preliminary study

被引:28
作者
Rovaris, M
Fesl, G
Yousry, T
Voltz, R
Calori, G
Filippi, M
机构
[1] UNIV MILAN,OSPED SAN RAFFAELE,INST SCI,DEPT NEUROL,I-20132 MILAN,ITALY
[2] UNIV MILAN,OSPED SAN RAFFAELE,INST SCI,DEPT MED STAT,I-20132 MILAN,ITALY
[3] UNIV MUNICH,KLINIKUM GROSSHADERN,DEPT DIAGNOST RADIOL,D-8000 MUNICH,GERMANY
[4] UNIV MUNICH,KLINIKUM GROSSHADERN,DEPT NEUROL,D-8000 MUNICH,GERMANY
关键词
D O I
10.1111/jon19977298
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Fast fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (fast-FLAIR), fast spin echo (FSE), and turbo-gradient spin echo (TGSE), new pulse sequences for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), are able to display multiple sclerosis (MS) lesions more conspicuously (fast-FLAIR) and with shorter imaging times (FSE, TGSE) than is conventional spin-echo MRI. In this study, we scanned 7 MS pa patients, using fast-FLAIR (18 axial brain slices), FSE (27 slices), and TGSE (9 slices) sequences in the same session, to compare the brain MRI lesion loads detected by these different sequences and the intraobserver reproducibility of these measurements. On the subset of slices (n = 9) covered by all three measurements, the mean lesion load was 7,577 mm(3) on fast-FLAIR, 5,248 mm(3) on FSE, and 3,080 mm(3) on TGSE (p = 0.006) sequences. The mean intraobserver coefficients of variation were 2.92% for fast-FLAIR, 2.86% for FSE, and 4.31% for TGSE (not significant). These findings demonstrate that both fast-FLAIR and FSE sequences may be potentially useful for serial MRI studies for monitoring clinical trials, while TGSE might be useful for speeding diagnostic MRI in MS patients. Longitudinal, clinically correlated studies using these new MRI sequences are needed to confirm these preliminary data.
引用
收藏
页码:98 / 102
页数:5
相关论文
共 15 条
[1]   STATISTICAL METHODS FOR ASSESSING AGREEMENT BETWEEN TWO METHODS OF CLINICAL MEASUREMENT [J].
BLAND, JM ;
ALTMAN, DG .
LANCET, 1986, 1 (8476) :307-310
[2]  
*BRIT STAND I, 1979, BR STANDARD, P5497
[3]   Quantitative assessment of MRI lesion load in monitoring the evolution of multiple sclerosis [J].
Filippi, M ;
Horsfield, MA ;
Tofts, PS ;
Barkhof, F ;
Thompson, AJ ;
Miller, DH .
BRAIN, 1995, 118 :1601-1612
[4]  
FILIPPI M, 1996, BRAIN, V119, P1344
[5]  
FILIPPI M, 1996, P INT SOC MAGN RES M, V1, P540
[6]   HIGH SIGNAL REGIONS IN NORMAL WHITE MATTER SHOWN BY HEAVILY T2-WEIGHTED CSF NULLED IR SEQUENCES [J].
HAJNAL, JV ;
DECOENE, B ;
LEWIS, PD ;
BAUDOUIN, CJ ;
COWAN, FM ;
PENNOCK, JM ;
YOUNG, IR ;
BYDDER, GM .
JOURNAL OF COMPUTER ASSISTED TOMOGRAPHY, 1992, 16 (04) :506-513
[7]   SUSPECTED MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS - MR-IMAGING WITH A THIN-SECTION PAST FLAIR PULSE SEQUENCE [J].
HASHEMI, RH ;
BRADLEY, WG ;
CHEN, DY ;
JORDAN, JE ;
QUERALT, JA ;
CHENG, AE ;
HENRIE, JN .
RADIOLOGY, 1995, 196 (02) :505-510
[8]   MAGNETIC-RESONANCE IN MONITORING THE TREATMENT OF MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS [J].
MILLER, DH .
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 1994, 36 :S91-S94
[9]   Guidelines for the use of magnetic resonance techniques in monitoring the treatment of multiple sclerosis [J].
Miller, DH ;
Albert, PS ;
Barkhof, F ;
Francis, G ;
Frank, JA ;
Hodgkinson, S ;
Lublin, FD ;
Paty, DW ;
Reingold, SC ;
Simon, J .
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 1996, 39 (01) :6-16
[10]   MAGNETIC-RESONANCE-IMAGING IN MONITORING THE TREATMENT OF MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS - CONCERTED ACTION GUIDELINES [J].
MILLER, DH ;
BARKHOF, F ;
BERRY, I ;
KAPPOS, L ;
SCOTTI, G ;
THOMPSON, AJ .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 1991, 54 (08) :683-688