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Imaging Techniques For Demyelinating Disorders

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Our initial focus will be on techniques for MR Imaging

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MR is the primary modality for evaluating patients

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who have a demyelinating disorder,

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and so we're going to dispense with discussion of CT.

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With respect to the MR Technique,

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the most commonly performed pulse sequences are

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going to be sagittal T1-weighted and sagittal

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FLAIR scans, axial FLAIR scans,

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axial T2-weighted scans,

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as well as pre and post-gadolinium

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T1-weighted scans.

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I'll talk a little bit about the role of

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susceptibility-weighted imaging in the evaluation

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of patients with white matter disease.

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So here, we have a sagittal T1-weighted scan,

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axial T2-weighted scans.

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axial FLAIR scan.

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Remember that the axial FLAIR scan is demarcated

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by dark CSF and bright signal intensity

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in the abnormal white matter.

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In addition,

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as opposed to other ways of evaluating the brain,

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sagittal scanning is utilized most effectively

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with multiple sclerosis evaluation.

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And because of the sagittal orientation,

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allows us to see the corpus callosum very well,

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as well as off-midline images

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to see the white matter and the location of

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white matter disease is very important.

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In this off-midline sagittal FLAIR scan,

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one can see white matter lesions that

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are within the deep white matter,

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as well as in the subcortical

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regions of the brain,

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an example of 7T FLAIR imaging.

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And with 7T FLAIR imaging,

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we're able to understand multiple sclerosis

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a little bit better in that it is indeed

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a perivenular demyelinating disorder.

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The example to the right here shows areas

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where the veins are present,

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and the demyelination is occurring

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around those veins.

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This is in contradistinction from other

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causes of white matter lesions,

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such as migraines or neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder,

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which we'll talk about shortly.

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So these perivenular techniques

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in the FLAIR scan,

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as well as what we'll see with

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susceptibility weighted scan,

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are very important for understanding both the

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pathophysiology of multiple sclerosis,

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as well as distinguishing it from other demyelinating disorders.

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While this is an example at 7T,

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you may also be able to see this at high

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resolution on 3 Tesla imaging.

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This is an example of three-dimensional FLAIR imaging.

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These are usually performed in the

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sagittal plane through the brain,

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and then reconstructed either in an axial plane

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or a coronal plane, or off-midline plane.

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In this example, one sees

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again, multiple sclerosis,

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as opposed to the differential diagnosis

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of multiple sclerosis,

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which includes Sjögren's disease as well as lupus

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as well as antiphospholipid syndrome.

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Once again, with multiple sclerosis,

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we see that perivenular demyelination.

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You see a linear area on the axial scan with the

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white matter abnormality seen around it.

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If you reconstruct in a sagittal plane,

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once again, you see the blood vessel,

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the vein in the center,

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with the demyelination around it.

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And this is a coronal plane where,

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once again,

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the vein is in the center and the demyelination,

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shown as the bright signal intensity,

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is seen around that vein.

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Contrast that with the differential diagnosis

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where there is no vein in these other entities,

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and that, again,

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is helpful in the differential diagnosis.

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Some people are

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employing post-gadolinium FLAIR imaging

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in order to detect enhancement of the leptomeninges,

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superficial to cortical white matter lesions.

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So, it's a little bit of a paradox that I'm talking

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about cortical white matter lesions,

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but we now know that multiple sclerosis is

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a disease not just of the white matter,

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but also of the gray matter.

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When one has superficial lesions in the cortex,

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you may see leptomeningeal enhancement

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superficial to the cortical lesion.

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In this example,

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one can see that on the post-gadolinium FLAIR imaging,

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you see this bright area in the cortex,

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which extends to this superficial layer of the Pia.

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And in the subarachnoid space and subpial

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cortex you see below here,

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there is indeed inflammatory process going on in

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the superficial meninges in the subarachnoid

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space adjacent to the cortex,

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where demyelination has occurred,

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and all of these darker cells are the inflammatory

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cells that are occurring in the leptomeninges.

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There have been recommended protocols that one can

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follow from various large multiple sclerosis

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societies, and this is one of them,

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from the consortium of MS Center Task force

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for a standardized MRI protocol.

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And this is largely what is utilized

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in the United States.

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So, the field strength should

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be of adequate quality.

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We usually use 1.5 or 3 Tesla scanning,

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and we're usually using axial oblique sections,

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and we cover the entire brain with

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sections that are 3 mm or less.

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And the core sequences that are described here

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include 3D sagittal FLAIR imaging,

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3D T2-weighted scans in an axial plane, generally,

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2D axial diffusion-weighted imaging.

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Now, diffusion-weighted imaging is interesting

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in multiple sclerosis.

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We use diffusion-weighted imaging as another

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attempt to determine the activity of disease.

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Because multiple sclerosis is a polyphasic disease,

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it has different aged plaques,

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and one way of determining an acute plaque is by

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whether or not it is showing restricted diffusion.

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We then have pre and post-gadolinium enhanced scans,

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sometimes with the FLAIR,

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sometimes with T1-weighted scans.

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You see here, 3D flash T1-weighted

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post-gadolinium enhanced scans.

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Again, this is because in order to determine the

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activity of a multiple sclerosis plaque,

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we also look at whether or not it is

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showing gadolinium enhancement,

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active blood-brain barrier breakdown.

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Optional sequences include proton

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density signal intensity sequences

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or doing the pre-gadolinium

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in a T1-weighted scan, instead of sagittal FLAIR

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and the susceptibility-weighted imaging,

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which I'll talk about shortly.

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This is another group of multiple sclerosis centers,

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and these are follow-up of MS plaques.

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And you can see, once again, that the core sequences

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that are recommended generally

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are 3D sequences with FLAIR,

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2D T2-weighted scans,

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or 3D sequences,

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the DWI,

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and then your gradient echo scans before

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and / or after contrast-enhanced images.

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So, if you look at the MS partners' technique

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and look at all the sequences

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that they're recommending,

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they include the 3D sagittal T1,

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axial T1 to look at pre and post-gadolinium,

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diffusion-weighted scans,

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FLAIR scans,

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axial proton density,

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and T2-weighted scans.

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This if for the volumetric evaluation of plaque volume,

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post-gadolinium enhanced scans,

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and then you have your various 3D

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and reconstructed 2D FLAIR scans.

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The key ones are the 3D FLAIR that can be

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reconstructed in any plane,

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the T2-weighted scan,

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and the pre and post-gadolinium enhanced scans

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in order to see enhancing plaques.

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With regard to scanning of the spine,

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most sequences include sagittal T1-weighted,

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sagittal T2-weighted, and sagittal STIR sequences

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with thin section images through the spinal cord,

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followed by axial T2-weighted scans

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and gradient echo scans.

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And I want to highlight this,

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that although the MS

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partner's Advanced technology and Health Solutions

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MS path spine sequences has gradient echo scan

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as an option, I want to highly recommend

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that you utilize this because on some cases,

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the gradient echo scan shows the demyelination in

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the spinal cord in a superior fashion

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to the T2-weighted scan.

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And of course,

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we do post-gadolinium T1-weighted scans

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to look for enhancing plaques.

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Here is the gradient echo sequence on the right

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hand side and the fast spin echo T2-weighted sequence

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on the left-hand side.

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And this is a nice example sample of how sometimes

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the gradient echo scan shows the plaques in a more

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elegant way than the regular fast spin echo

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T2-weighted sequence.

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So just to make sure we're all

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looking at the same thing,

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here is a plaque along the lateral right side of

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the spinal cord on the T2-weighted

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fast spin echo scan.

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Notice how well you see that or how much better

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you see that on the gradient echo.

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And the same is true in this posterior column

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plaque on the left side,

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compared to the fast spin echo sequence.

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So this is gradient echo here.

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And these are the fast spin echo.

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And in my opinion,

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gradient echo sometimes is very valuable.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Neuroradiology

MRI

Brain

Acquired/Developmental

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