Deligianni X, Bieri O, Elke R, Wischer T, Egelhof T
Department of Radiology, Division of Radiological Physics, University of Basel Hospital, Basel, Switzerland.
Orthomerian, Basel, Switzerland.
Rofo. 2015 Dec;187(12):1116-22. doi: 10.1055/s-0041-104893. Epub 2015 Sep 1.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of soft tissues after total hip arthroplasty is of clinical interest for the diagnosis of various pathologies that are usually invisible with other imaging modalities. As a result, considerable effort has been put into the development of metal artifact reduction MRI strategies, such as slice encoding for metal artifact correction (SEMAC). Generally, the degree of metal artifact reduction with SEMAC directly relates to the overall time spent for acquisition, but there is no specific consensus about the most efficient sequence setup depending on the implant material. The aim of this article is to suggest material-tailored SEMAC protocol settings.
Five of the most common total hip prostheses (1. Revision prosthesis (S-Rom), 2. Titanium alloy, 3. Müller type (CoNiCRMo alloy), 4. Old Charnley prosthesis (Exeter/Stryker), 5. MS-30 stem (stainless-steel)) were scanned on a 1.5 T MRI clinical scanner with a SEMAC sequence with a range of artifact-resolving slice encoding steps (SES: 2-23) along the slice direction (yielding a total variable scan time ranging from 1 to 10 min). The reduction of the artifact volume in comparison with maximal artifact suppression was evaluated both quantitatively and qualitatively in order to establish a recommended number of steps for each case.
The number of SES that reduced the artifact volume below approximately 300 mm(3) ranged from 3 to 13, depending on the material. Our results showed that although 3 SES steps can be sufficient for artifact reduction for titanium prostheses, at least 11 SES should be used for prostheses made of materials such as certain alloys of stainless steel.
Tailoring SES to the implant material and to the desired degree of metal artifact reduction represents a simple tool for workflow optimization of SEMAC imaging near total hip arthroplasty in a clinical setting.
Five of the most common total hip prostheses have been investigated in vitro. Tailored SEMAC protocols - in terms of scan duration - have been determined. Tailoring was similar for T1-weighted and inversion recovery SEMAC MRI. The suggested prosthesis-related SEMAC adaptation shortens clinical scan times.
全髋关节置换术后软组织的磁共振成像(MRI)对于诊断各种通常在其他成像方式下不可见的病理情况具有临床意义。因此,人们在开发减少金属伪影的MRI策略方面投入了大量精力,例如用于金属伪影校正的切片编码(SEMAC)。一般来说,SEMAC减少金属伪影的程度直接与采集所花费的总时间相关,但对于根据植入材料确定最有效的序列设置尚无具体共识。本文的目的是提出针对材料定制的SEMAC协议设置。
在1.5T MRI临床扫描仪上,使用SEMAC序列对五种最常见的全髋关节假体(1. 翻修假体(S-Rom),2. 钛合金,3. 米勒型(钴镍铬钼合金),4. 旧查恩利假体(埃克塞特/史赛克),5. MS-30柄(不锈钢))进行扫描,沿切片方向采用一系列可解决伪影的切片编码步骤(SES:2 - 23)(产生的总可变扫描时间范围为1至10分钟)。为了确定每种情况下推荐的步骤数,对与最大伪影抑制相比的伪影体积减少情况进行了定量和定性评估。
将伪影体积减少到约300立方毫米以下的SES数量根据材料不同在3到13之间。我们的结果表明,虽然3个SES步骤对于减少钛假体的伪影可能就足够了,但对于由某些不锈钢合金等材料制成的假体,至少应使用11个SES。
根据植入材料和所需的金属伪影减少程度调整SES,是在临床环境中对全髋关节置换术附近的SEMAC成像工作流程进行优化的一种简单工具。
对五种最常见的全髋关节假体进行了体外研究。已确定了根据扫描持续时间定制的SEMAC协议。T1加权和反转恢复SEMAC MRI的定制相似。建议的与假体相关的SEMAC调整缩短了临床扫描时间。