Frederik Abel, Ek T Tan, Yenpo Lin, J Levi Chazen, Darren R Lebl, Darryl B Sneag
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Cervical spine MRI is essential for evaluating potential complications and symptomatic degenerative changes following cervical decompression and fusion surgery. High-yield diagnostic interpretation considers the underlying surgical approach (anterior vs posterior), the time elapsed since surgery, and the clinical status of the patient to reliably differentiate expected postoperative changes from surgical complications. As cervical anatomy, such as the foramina and nerve roots, is smaller than that of the lumbar spine, MRI acquisition challenges include the demand for higher spatial resolution. Another unique challenge for cervical spine MRI is susceptibility to motion artifacts from swallowing, breathing, and cerebrospinal fluid pulsation. Modified MRI protocols, including the use of metal artifact suppression techniques, can help mitigate susceptibility artifacts from metallic implants. This focused review of postoperative cervical spine MRI discusses common cervical surgery decompression and fusion approaches and recommended MRI acquisition and interpretation algorithms, briefly considers radiofrequency coil selection, and illustrates complications in both early and delayed phases.
期刊介绍:
Published regularly since 1923 by the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA), Radiology has long been recognized as the authoritative reference for the most current, clinically relevant and highest quality research in the field of radiology. Each month the journal publishes approximately 240 pages of peer-reviewed original research, authoritative reviews, well-balanced commentary on significant articles, and expert opinion on new techniques and technologies.
Radiology publishes cutting edge and impactful imaging research articles in radiology and medical imaging in order to help improve human health.