NeuroMix 与 MR 血管造影:减少急性神经系统症状患者头颈部 CT 血管造影的快速 MR 方案。

Johannes H Decker, Alexander T Mazal, Amy Bui, Tim Sprenger, Stefan Skare, Nancy Fischbein, Greg Zaharchuk
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景和目的:在急诊科(ED)和住院环境中过度使用基于计算机断层扫描(CT)的脑血管成像,尤其是针对轻微和非病灶性神经系统症状的头颈部 CT 血管造影术(CTAHN),给成像服务带来了压力,并使患者暴露于辐射和对比剂中。此外,这种基于 CT 的成像通常不足以进行明确诊断,需要进行额外的磁共振成像。快速核磁共振成像技术的最新进展可以对特定人群进行及时评估并减少对 CTAHN 的需求:我们确定了在 9 个月内(2022 年 4 月至 12 月)接受 CTAHN(包括非对比和对比后 CTH,有或没有 CT 灌注 [CTP] 成像)后 24 小时内进行 3T MRI 研究的住院病人或急诊室病人,其中包括 NeuroMix(2.5 分钟的非增强多对比序列)和颅内飞行时间 MR 血管造影(MRA;5 分钟序列)。病例由 4 位放射科医生在达成共识的基础上进行分类,以确定 NeuroMix 和 NeuroMix+MRA 与 CTAHN 相比是否检测出相同的结果、检测出独特的结果或漏检结果:174例病例(平均年龄67±16岁;56%为女性)符合纳入标准。分别有 71% 和 95% 的患者的 NeuroMix 和 NeuroMix+MRA 方案被确定为与 CTAHN 相当或更好。NeuroMix始终能提供等效或更好的脑实质评估,分别有35%和36%的病例在NeuroMix和NeuroMix+MRA上有独特的发现,最常见的是急性脑梗塞或多发性微出血。在8/174例病例(5%)中,CTAHN发现了NeuroMix+MRA方案未发现的血管异常,原因是CTAHN对颈部动脉的覆盖范围更广:结论:与 CTAHN 相比,由 NeuroMix+MRA 组成的快速磁共振成像方案可为 95% 的急性神经系统疾病患者提供同等或更好的信息。这些研究结果让我们更深入地了解了以NeuroMix+MRA为基础的快速非增强磁共振成像方法的优势和挑战,可用于在特定患者群体中设计前瞻性试验,从而有可能降低辐射剂量,减轻与对比剂相关的患者和环境不良影响,减轻放射科医生和医疗系统的负担:缩写:CTAHN = 头颈部CTA,包括非对比和延迟对比后头部CT,带或不带CT灌注;NeuroMix = 未增强多对比MR脑序列。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
NeuroMix with MRA: A Fast MR Protocol to Reduce Head and Neck CTA for Patients with Acute Neurologic Presentations.

Background and purpose: Overuse of CT-based cerebrovascular imaging in the emergency department and inpatient settings, notably CTA of the head and neck for minor and nonfocal neurologic presentations, stresses imaging services and exposes patients to radiation and contrast. Furthermore, such CT-based imaging is often insufficient for definitive diagnosis, necessitating additional MR imaging. Recent advances in fast MRI may allow timely assessment and a reduced need for head and neck CTA in select populations.

Materials and methods: We identified inpatients or patients in the emergency department who underwent CTAHN (including noncontrast and postcontrast head CT, with or without CTP imaging) followed within 24 hours by a 3T MRI study that included a 2.5-minute unenhanced multicontrast sequence (NeuroMix) and a 5-minute intracranial time of flight MRA) during a 9-month period (April to December 2022). Cases were classified by 4 radiologists in consensus as to whether NeuroMix and NeuroMix + MRA detected equivalent findings, detected unique findings, or missed findings relative to CTAHN.

Results: One hundred seventy-four cases (mean age, 67 [SD, 16] years; 56% female) met the inclusion criteria. NeuroMix alone and NeuroMix + MRA protocols were determined to be equivalent or better compared with CTAHN in 71% and 95% of patients, respectively. NeuroMix always provided equivalent or better assessment of the brain parenchyma, with unique findings on NeuroMix and NeuroMix + MRA in 35% and 36% of cases, respectively, most commonly acute infarction or multiple microhemorrhages. In 8/174 cases (5%), CTAHN identified vascular abnormalities not seen on the NeuroMix + MRA protocol due to the wider coverage of the cervical arteries by CTAHN.

Conclusions: A fast MR imaging protocol consisting of NeuroMix + MRA provided equivalent or better information compared with CTAHN in 95% of cases in our population of patients with an acute neurologic presentation. The findings provide a deeper understanding of the benefits and challenges of a fast unenhanced MR-first approach with NeuroMix + MRA, which could be used to design prospective trials in select patient groups, with the potential to reduce radiation dose, mitigate adverse contrast-related patient and environmental effects, and lessen the burden on radiologists and health care systems.

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