Atlas S W, Grossman R I, Hackney D B, Gomori J M, Campagna N, Goldberg H I, Bilaniuk L T, Zimmerman R A
Department of Radiology, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104.
AJR Am J Roentgenol. 1988 Jun;150(6):1383-9. doi: 10.2214/ajr.150.6.1383.
Seventeen patients with partially calcified intracranial lesions, as documented by CT, were evaluated with MR imaging at 1.5 T. All patients were imaged with both conventional spin-echo techniques and reduced flip-angle gradient-echo-acquisition (GEA) sequences, during which a signal is acquired in the absence of a 180 degrees radiofrequency pulse. GEA parameters were implemented so that T2* effects were maximized on these scans. In all 17 patients GEA images showed marked hypointensity throughout the entire area of calcification, matching the calcified region as seen on CT. In contrast, spin-echo findings in the calcified portions of the lesions were extremely variable, precluding confident identification of calcification on these images. The depiction of regions of calcification as marked hypointensity on GEA images can be ascribed to T2* shortening from static local magnetic field gradients at interfaces of regions differing in magnetic susceptibility, a phenomenon that is well documented in vitro, when various diamagnetic solids are placed in aqueous suspension. However, we cannot exclude the possible additional role of accompanying paramagnetic ions, which sometimes are present with diamagnetic calcium salts in various intracranial calcifications. Since the hypointensity due to calcification on GEA images is not specific, noncontrast CT could be used to confirm its presence. Although this lack of specificity and the artifacts that emanate from diamagnetic susceptibility gradients at or near air-brain interfaces somewhat limit the application of GEA techniques, we suggest that rapid MR imaging using GEA sequences can consistently demonstrate intracranial calcification, and that this technique thus seems to be a useful adjunct to conventional spin-echo imaging.
17例经CT证实存在部分钙化的颅内病变患者接受了1.5T磁共振成像(MR)评估。所有患者均采用传统自旋回波技术和小角度翻转梯度回波采集(GEA)序列进行成像,在GEA序列成像过程中,信号采集时不施加180°射频脉冲。设置GEA参数,使这些扫描中的T2效应最大化。在所有17例患者中,GEA图像显示整个钙化区域均呈明显低信号,与CT所见的钙化区域相符。相比之下,病变钙化部分的自旋回波表现变化极大,无法在这些图像上可靠地识别钙化。GEA图像上钙化区域呈现明显低信号可归因于在磁敏感性不同区域的界面处,静态局部磁场梯度导致的T2缩短,这种现象在体外实验中,当各种抗磁性固体置于水悬浮液中时已有充分记录。然而,我们不能排除伴随的顺磁性离子可能发挥的额外作用,在各种颅内钙化中,顺磁性离子有时会与抗磁性钙盐同时存在。由于GEA图像上钙化所致的低信号不具有特异性,因此可使用平扫CT来确认其存在。尽管这种缺乏特异性以及气脑界面处或其附近抗磁性敏感性梯度产生的伪影在一定程度上限制了GEA技术的应用,但我们认为使用GEA序列的快速MR成像能够持续显示颅内钙化,因此该技术似乎是传统自旋回波成像的一种有用辅助手段。