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      BLADE in Sagittal T2-Weighted MR Imaging of the Cervical Spine

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          Abstract

          BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:

          Image quality and diagnostic reliability of T2-weighted MR images of the cervical spine are often impaired by several kinds of artifacts, even in cooperative patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate if BLADE sequences might solve these problems in a routine patient collective.

          MATERIALS AND METHODS:

          TSE and BLADE sequences were compared in 60 patients for T2-weighted sagittal imaging of the cervical spine. Image sharpness, motion artifacts, truncation artifacts, metal artifacts, CSF flow phenomena, contrast of anatomic structures (vertebral body/disk, spinal cord/CSF), and diagnostic reliability of spinal cord depiction were evaluated by 2 independent readers. Another 2 readers selected the sequence they would prefer for diagnostic purposes. Statistical evaluations were performed by using the Wilcoxon and the χ 2 test; differences with P < .05 were regarded as statistically significant.

          RESULTS:

          BLADE was significantly superior to TSE regarding image sharpness, image contrast, diagnostic reliability of spinal cord depiction, motion artifacts, CSF flow phenomena, and truncation artifacts; for metal artifacts no significant improvements were found. In 50 of 60 patients, BLADE was preferred for diagnostic purposes, and TSE was favored in 3 patients. The number of examinations that were nondiagnostic due to impaired spinal cord depiction was reduced from 12 in TSE to 3 in BLADE, and nondiagnostic examinations due to overall motion artifacts were reduced from 2 to 1.

          CONCLUSIONS:

          Using the BLADE sequence for sagittal T2-weighted imaging of the cervical spine proved to be advantageous to reduce various kinds of artifacts.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          AJNR Am J Neuroradiol
          AJNR Am J Neuroradiol
          ajnr
          ajnr
          AJNR
          AJNR: American Journal of Neuroradiology
          American Society of Neuroradiology
          0195-6108
          1936-959X
          April 2010
          : 31
          : 4
          : 674-681
          Affiliations
          [1] aFrom the Institute of Radiology (C.F., C.M., N.Z., A.S., E.M.J., S.F., T.F.), University Medical Center Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany
          [2] bInstitute of Radiology (F.A.F., C.G.), General Hospital, Linz, Austria
          [3] cInstitute of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology (T.F.), Klinikum Weiden, Weiden, Germany
          Author notes
          Please address correspondence to Claudia Fellner, PhD, Institute of Radiology, University Medical Center, Franz-Josef-Strauß-Allee 11, 93053 Regensburg, Germany; e-mail: claudia.fellner@ 123456klinik.uni-regensburg.de
          Article
          PMC7964237 PMC7964237 7964237 09-00785
          10.3174/ajnr.A1894
          7964237
          19942708
          749f609a-260d-4b38-b76d-1d792050d282
          Copyright © American Society of Neuroradiology
          History
          : 15 July 2009
          : 22 August 2009
          Categories
          Spine

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