Comparison of 1.5 and 3.0 T for contrast-enhanced pulmonary magnetic resonance angiography. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • OBJECTIVE: In a recent multi-center trial of gadolinium contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance angiography (Gd-MRA) for diagnosis of acute pulmonary embolism (PE), two centers utilized a common MRI platform though at different field strengths (1.5T and 3T) and realized a signal-to-noise gain with the 3T platform. This retrospective analysis investigates this gain in signal-to-noise of pulmonary vascular targets. METHODS: Thirty consecutive pulmonary MRA examinations acquired on a 1.5T system at one institution were compared to 30 consecutive pulmonary MRA examinations acquired on a 3T system at a different institution. Both systems were from the same MRI manufacturer and both used the same Gd-MRA pulse sequence, although there were some protocol adjustments made due to field strength differences. Region-of-interests were manually defined on the main pulmonary artery, 4 pulmonary veins, thoracic aorta, and background lung for objective measurement of signal-to-noise, contrast-to-noise, and bolus timing bias between centers. RESULTS: The 3T pulmonary MRA protocol achieved higher spatial resolution yet maintained significantly higher signal-to-noise ratio (≥13%, p = 0.03) in the main pulmonary vessels relative to 1.5T. There was no evidence of operator bias in bolus timing or patient hemodynamic differences between groups. CONCLUSION: Relative to 1.5T, higher spatial resolution Gd-MRA can be achieved at 3T with a sustained or greater signal-to-noise ratio of enhanced vasculature.

publication date

  • October 12, 2011

Research

keywords

  • Lung
  • Magnetic Resonance Angiography
  • Pulmonary Embolism

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC3698487

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84858377728

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1177/1076029611419840

PubMed ID

  • 21993980

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 18

issue

  • 2