Interactive Transcript
0:01
Our next section is positioning
0:02
technique and protocol.
0:06
Positioning is really important for breast MRI.
0:10
The positioning is prone, so the patient is
0:13
lying face down with her face in a face holder.
0:16
We use a dedicated breast coil.
0:19
The breasts are centered from
0:20
top to bottom and side to side.
0:23
The nipples should be straight
0:24
down and the breast pulled down.
0:27
So this is going to require some
0:30
cooperation between the patient and
0:32
the technologist to get it right.
0:34
The breast should not touch the coil,
0:36
if possible. Sometimes it's difficult
0:39
if the patient has larger breasts.
0:41
The arms can be positioned up or
0:43
down, depending on patient's comfort.
0:46
And we really want to try and make the patient
0:48
as comfortable as possible because it's
0:50
going to be really important that the patient
0:52
doesn't move at all during this exam.
0:57
This is a typical position, a diagram
0:59
of a patient positioned for the exam.
1:02
Or she's clothed for this model, but...
1:07
You can see that her face is in the face holder,
1:10
and she's in a relatively relaxed position.
1:13
There's a support
1:15
in the center of the chest that
1:16
sort of rests against the sternum.
1:18
It's padded, but it is somewhat uncomfortable.
1:22
And in this case, that patient's arms are
1:24
down, but they can also be up over her
1:26
head in the sort of Superman position.
1:30
We use a 1.5 or 3 Tesla MRI scanner, and
1:32
we do bilateral axial imaging.
1:35
And I think it's very important to
1:40
use an appropriate field of view.
1:42
And I just want to show you an example of...
1:46
appropriate and inappropriate field of view.
1:49
So this is one of our cases from our
1:53
institution, and you can see that the
1:55
majority of the field is occupied by the
1:59
breasts, right breast and left breast.
2:03
We can see that pectoralis muscle is included,
2:06
sternum is there, part of the heart, anterior
2:10
chest, and we know that as we would scroll
2:14
up and down through this exam, we'd be
2:17
able to see the axillary lymph nodes.
2:19
So that's important.
2:21
And internal mammary lymph nodes would be
2:23
here in the anterior portion of the chest.
2:25
We want to be able to see those
2:27
as well, but really we don't want
2:29
to include the rest of the chest.
2:31
And this is an example that we looked
2:34
at as an outside interpretation.
2:36
And you can see in this study, the
2:40
field of view includes the entire chest.
2:43
And we really don't want to be
2:45
looking at the vertebral bodies
2:47
or descending aorta for this exam.
2:49
It's not really part of the exam, and
2:51
we want the focus to be on the breasts.
2:53
And it does affect pixel size when
2:58
you have a larger field of view.
3:00
So we want to have an appropriate field
3:03
of view for best practice imaging.
3:06
This is our protocol at Hopkins.
3:09
We do a three-plane localizer:
3:12
axial, sagittal, and coronal,
3:17
and then the technologist uses the
3:19
localizer to prescribe the slices.
3:25
And then we do a T1-weighted
3:27
sequence with no fat saturation.
3:31
Then we run a STIR sequence, and
3:34
then a T1-weighted sequence with fat
3:37
saturation, and that's pre-contrast.
3:40
Then we give gadolinium-based IV contrast.
3:44
The power injector amount of contrast
3:47
we give is weight-based, and then we do
3:51
the same T1-weighted fat-saturated images
3:55
in a dynamic fashion after contrast.
3:58
We use three time points.
4:00
After we give the contrast, we
4:03
have a 30-second delay before we start
4:06
imaging, and then those three sets of
4:09
images are just performed consecutively.
4:13
Our post-processing includes subtraction images
4:16
and a maximum intensity projection image,
4:19
and that maximum intensity projection image
4:21
is based off of the first subtracted series.
4:26
I put diffusion-weighted imaging in
4:28
parentheses here because we don't, uh,
4:31
perform this as part of our routine protocol,
4:36
but I know a lot of other institutions do.
4:38
So I'm just adding that, but the images that
4:41
I'm going to be showing today, or the cases that
4:43
I'm going to be showing today do not include
4:46
DWI because it's not part of our protocol.
4:50
I wanted to run through this protocol
4:53
with you, and the images that I'm going
4:55
to be showing you are from the same slice,
4:59
just from different series.
5:01
So this is our T1 non-fat-saturated sequence.
5:05
You can see on this series, here's
5:08
the right breast and the left breast.
5:11
Our fatty tissue is quite bright, so high
5:17
signal intensity, whereas the breast tissue
5:20
itself is of relatively low signal intensity,
5:25
as are some of the other structures,
5:26
including the pectoralis muscle
5:29
sternum, and other muscular tissue.
5:33
This patient has some cysts, fluid-filled cysts,
5:36
and they are of low signal intensity on T1.
5:42
This is our STIR sequence, and you
5:44
can see that the fatty tissue is
5:46
suppressed, so it is dark on STIR.
5:49
And the things that are bright on STIR
5:52
images would be things that contain fluid.
5:57
So the fluid in the cysts is bright.
6:01
If we had edema in the breast tissue
6:03
or the skin, that would also be bright.
6:05
And this patient happens to have some
6:07
physiologic fluid, pleural fluid in the
6:10
right hemithorax, and that layers anteriorly
6:13
because the patient is lying prone.
6:15
And, uh, we can see that as bright on the STIR.
6:19
This is our T1-weighted fat-saturated image,
6:22
and you can see that the fat becomes darker.
6:25
The tissue is a little bit brighter than what
6:27
we were seeing on the T1 with no fat saturation.
6:31
Muscles are also a little bit bright.
6:34
And then this sequence is useful for looking
6:38
at areas that are intrinsically T1 bright.
6:42
So if we have proteinaceous fluid in the
6:45
ducts, and there's a little bit of that
6:48
here, you can see these little white dots.
6:51
Or proteinaceous fluid in a cyst.
6:54
Sometimes hematomas at certain
6:56
stages will be bright on T1 as well.
6:59
This is after administration of contrast,
7:01
our first post-contrast administration,
7:04
and you can see that some of the
7:06
background tissue is starting to enhance.
7:09
There are little foci of enhancement throughout.
7:13
And you can also see the blood vessels
7:15
are enhancing, and the heart is enhancing.
7:18
And you can see internal mammary
7:21
artery and vein well on these images.
7:26
This is the second post-contrast sequence,
7:29
and you can see the breast tissue is starting
7:31
to enhance a little bit more as we go along.
7:35
The blood vessels are still enhancing.
7:37
The heart is still bright.
7:39
And our third post-contrast sequence,
7:44
tissue enhancing a little bit more
7:47
and blood vessels are still bright.
7:50
In post-processing, we're going
7:51
to do some subtraction imaging.
7:54
So we're subtracting the pre
7:57
from the post-contrast images.
7:59
And what should be enhancing at this point are
8:03
just the areas that are enhancing with contrast.
8:05
So you can see all of these little
8:07
foci of enhancement in the background,
8:10
as well as the blood vessels.
8:14
Second post-contrast subtraction series,
8:19
and third post-contrast subtraction series.
8:22
And you can just see that the breast tissue
8:24
is filling in more and more with time.
8:28
This is the MIP or maximum
8:31
intensity projection image.
8:33
And this is a nice overview
8:34
of the entire breast.
8:36
Usually this can be turned or tumbled so that
8:40
you can look at it in different projections.
8:43
But this is the, you know,
8:44
sort of true axial projection.
8:46
You can see that there's a lot of
8:48
background parenchymal enhancement here.
8:51
All of this tissue is enhancing.
8:53
You get a nice overview of all the vessels and
8:57
some imaging of the axillary nodes as well.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.