Cadotte D W, Cadotte A, Cohen-Adad J, Fleet D, Livne M, Wilson J R, Mikulis D, Nugaeva N, Fehlings M G
From the Department of Surgery, Division of Neurosurgery (D.W.C., A.C., J.R.W., M.G.F.) Toronto Western Hospital (D.W.C., D.M., N.N., M.G.F.), University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
From the Department of Surgery, Division of Neurosurgery (D.W.C., A.C., J.R.W., M.G.F.).
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2015 Apr;36(4):803-10. doi: 10.3174/ajnr.A4192. Epub 2014 Dec 18.
Advanced MR imaging techniques are critical to understanding the pathophysiology of conditions involving the spinal cord. We provide a novel, quantitative solution to map vertebral and spinal cord levels accounting for anatomic variability within the human spinal cord. For the first time, we report a population distribution of the segmental anatomy of the cervical spinal cord that has direct implications for the interpretation of advanced imaging studies most often conducted across groups of subjects.
Twenty healthy volunteers underwent a T2-weighted, 3T MRI of the cervical spinal cord. Two experts marked the C3-C8 cervical nerve rootlets, C3-C7 vertebral bodies, and pontomedullary junction. A semiautomated algorithm was used to locate the centerline of the spinal cord and measure rostral-caudal distances from a fixed point in the brain stem, the pontomedullary junction, to each of the spinal rootlets and vertebral bodies. Distances to each location were compared across subjects. Six volunteers had 2 additional scans in neck flexion and extension to measure the effects of patient positioning in the scanner.
We demonstrated that substantial variation exists in the rostral-caudal position of spinal cord segments among individuals and that prior methods of predicting spinal segments are imprecise. We also show that neck flexion or extension has little effect on the relative location of vertebral-versus-spinal levels.
Accounting for spinal level variation is lacking in existing imaging studies. Future studies should account for this variation for accurate interpretation of the neuroanatomic origin of acquired MR signals.
先进的磁共振成像技术对于理解涉及脊髓的疾病的病理生理学至关重要。我们提供了一种新颖的定量解决方案,用于绘制椎骨和脊髓节段水平,同时考虑到人类脊髓内的解剖变异。我们首次报告了颈髓节段解剖结构的人群分布情况,这对于解释大多数跨受试者群体进行的先进影像学研究具有直接意义。
20名健康志愿者接受了颈椎脊髓的3T T2加权磁共振成像检查。两名专家标记了C3 - C8颈神经根丝、C3 - C7椎体以及脑桥延髓交界处。使用一种半自动算法来定位脊髓的中心线,并测量从脑干中的一个固定点(脑桥延髓交界处)到每个脊髓神经根丝和椎体的头尾距离。对不同受试者到每个位置的距离进行了比较。6名志愿者在颈部屈伸时又进行了两次扫描,以测量患者在扫描仪中的体位影响。
我们证明个体之间脊髓节段的头尾位置存在显著差异,并且先前预测脊髓节段的方法并不精确。我们还表明,颈部屈伸对椎体与脊髓水平的相对位置影响很小。
现有影像学研究缺乏对脊髓水平变异的考虑。未来的研究应考虑这种变异,以便准确解释获得性磁共振信号的神经解剖学起源。