## Abstract Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques have been developed for noninvasive assessment of the structure of articular cartilage. T~2~ relaxation time is sensitive to the integrity and orientation of the collagen network, while T~1~ relaxation time in presence of Gd‐DTPA^
Global and regional reproducibility of T2 relaxation time measurements in human patellar cartilage
✍ Scribed by C. Glaser; T. Mendlik; J. Dinges; J. Weber; R. Stahl; C. Trumm; M. Reiser
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 234 KB
- Volume
- 56
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Seven T~2~ maps (multiecho (ME) sequence: 3000 ms, eight echoes with 13.2 ms of echo spacing, 20 sections) and T~1~‐weighted (T~1~‐w) fast low‐angle shot (FLASH‐water excitation (WE)) data sets from four imaging sessions (right patellae of 10 healthy volunteers) were obtained. A segmentation of cartilage (WE sequence) was overlaid on the ME data and T~2~ values were calculated for total cartilage, three layers, three facets (global), and 240 ROIs (regional). Reproducibility (precision error) was calculated as the root mean square average (RMSA) of the individual coefficients of variation (COVs, %) and standard deviations (SDs, ms) for intra‐ and intersession reproducibility. The precision error was 3–7% and 6–29% for global and regional T~2~, respectively. There was no difference between intra‐ and intersession reproducibility, but there was worse reproducibility in the superficial layers compared to the deeper layers. Peripheral ROI reproducibility (mean = 13%) was worse than in the central portions (mean = 11%), but omission of the periphery did not positively affect the globally calculated T~2~ reproducibility. The precision errors were small compared to reported changes in diseased cartilage, suggesting good discriminatory power of the technique. Our data provide a first estimate of global and regional reproducibility errors of T~2~ in healthy cartilage, and may serve as a basis for sample size calculations and aid study designs for longitudinal and cross‐sectional trials in osteoarthritis (OA). Magn Reson Med, 2006. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The transverse relaxation time, T(2), of native cartilage is used to quantify cartilage degradation. T(2) is frequently measured after contrast administration, assuming that the impact of gadolinium-based contrast agents on cartilage T(2) is negligible. To verify this assumption the depth-dependent
## Abstract ## Purpose To measure ^1^H relaxation times of cerebral metabolites at 3 T and to investigate regional variations within the brain. ## Materials and Methods Investigations were performed on a 3.0‐T clinical whole‐body magnetic resonance (MR) system. T2 relaxation times of N‐acetyl as
## Abstract ## Purpose The purpose of this study is to measure the longitudinal (T1) relaxation time of human lung parenchyma at 3.0 Tesla (T), independent of large vessel signal, and to examine T1 as a function of position in gravitational, isogravitational, and radial planes. ## Materials and M
The goal of this work is to provide regional T(1) and T(2) values at a field strength of 7 T for the normal mouse brain at 6 weeks and 1 year old. A novel segmented snapshot FLASH sequence was used to measure T(1) in the hippocampus, corpus callosum, and the retrosplenial granular (RSG) cortex; T(2)