磁化率加权成像
医学
定量磁化率图
脑淀粉样血管病
神经影像学
痴呆
病理
放射科
冲程(发动机)
磁共振成像
疾病
机械工程
精神科
工程类
作者
Sven Haller,E. Mark Haacke,Majda M. Thurnher,Frederik Barkhof
出处
期刊:Radiology
[Radiological Society of North America]
日期:2021-02-23
卷期号:299 (1): 3-26
被引量:135
标识
DOI:10.1148/radiol.2021203071
摘要
Susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) evolved from simple two-dimensional T2*-weighted sequences to three-dimensional sequences with improved spatial resolution and enhanced susceptibility contrast. SWI is an MRI sequence sensitive to compounds that distort the local magnetic field (eg, calcium and iron), in which the phase information can differentiate. But the term SWI is colloquially used to denote high-spatial-resolution susceptibility-enhanced sequences across different MRI vendors and sequences even when phase information is not used. The imaging appearance of SWI and related sequences strongly depends on the acquisition technique. Initially, SWI and related sequences were mostly used to improve the depiction of findings already known from standard two-dimensional T2*-weighted neuroimaging: more microbleeds in patients who are aging or with dementia or mild brain trauma; increased conspicuity of superficial siderosis in Alzheimer disease and amyloid angiopathy; and iron deposition in neurodegenerative diseases or abnormal vascular structures, such as capillary telangiectasia. But SWI also helps to identify findings not visible on standard T2*-weighted images: the nigrosome 1 in Parkinson disease and dementia with Lewy bodies, the central vein and peripheral rim signs in multiple sclerosis, the peripheral rim sign in abscesses, arterial signal loss related to thrombus, asymmetrically prominent cortical veins in stroke, and intratumoral susceptibility signals in brain neoplasms. © RSNA, 2021 Online supplemental material is available for this article.
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