Invest Radiol. 2021 Nov 1;56(11):734-748. doi: 10.1097/RLI.0000000000000798.
During the last decade, metal artifact reduction in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been an area of intensive research and substantial improvement. The demand for an excellent diagnostic MRI scan quality of tissues around metal implants is closely linked to the steadily increasing number of joint arthroplasty (especially knee and hip arthroplasties) and spinal stabilization procedures. Its unmatched soft tissue contrast and cross-sectional nature make MRI a valuable tool in early detection of frequently encountered postoperative complications, such as periprosthetic infection, material wear-induced synovitis, osteolysis, or damage of the soft tissues. However, metal-induced artifacts remain a constant challenge. Successful artifact reduction plays an important role in the diagnostic workup of patients with painful/dysfunctional arthroplasties and helps to improve patient outcome. The artifact severity depends both on the implant and the acquisition technique. The implant's material, in particular its magnetic susceptibility and electrical conductivity, its size, geometry, and orientation in the MRI magnet are critical. On the acquisition side, the magnetic field strength, the employed imaging pulse sequence, and several acquisition parameters can be optimized. As a rule of thumb, the choice of a 1.5-T over a 3.0-T magnet, a fast spin-echo sequence over a spin-echo or gradient-echo sequence, a high receive bandwidth, a small voxel size, and short tau inversion recovery-based fat suppression can mitigate the impact of metal artifacts on diagnostic image quality. However, successful imaging of large orthopedic implants (eg, arthroplasties) often requires further optimized artifact reduction methods, such as slice encoding for metal artifact correction or multiacquisition variable-resonance image combination. With these tools, MRI at 1.5 T is now widely considered the modality of choice for the clinical evaluation of patients with metal implants.
在过去的十年中,磁共振成像(MRI)中的金属伪影减少一直是一个研究热点,并且取得了实质性的进展。对金属植入物周围组织具有出色诊断性 MRI 扫描质量的需求与关节置换术(尤其是膝关节和髋关节置换术)和脊柱稳定术数量的稳步增加密切相关。MRI 无与伦比的软组织对比度和切面特性使其成为早期发现常见术后并发症(如假体周围感染、材料磨损引起的滑膜炎、骨溶解或软组织损伤)的有价值工具。然而,金属引起的伪影仍然是一个持续存在的挑战。成功减少伪影在诊断假体疼痛/功能障碍患者方面发挥着重要作用,并有助于改善患者的预后。伪影的严重程度取决于植入物和采集技术。植入物的材料(尤其是其磁导率和电导率)、尺寸、几何形状和在 MRI 磁体中的方向至关重要。在采集方面,可以优化磁场强度、所采用的成像脉冲序列和多个采集参数。一般来说,选择 1.5T 而不是 3.0T 磁体、选择快速自旋回波序列而不是自旋回波或梯度回波序列、使用高接收带宽、较小的体素大小和基于短反转时间反转恢复的短脂肪抑制,可以减轻金属伪影对诊断图像质量的影响。然而,成功地对大型骨科植入物(例如,关节置换术)进行成像通常需要进一步优化的伪影减少方法,例如用于金属伪影校正的切片编码或多采集可变共振图像组合。有了这些工具,1.5T 的 MRI 现在被广泛认为是评估金属植入物患者的首选模态。