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Diffusion tensor imaging and T 2 relaxometry of bilateral lumbar nerve roots: feasibility of in-plane imaging

Authors :
Emine Ulku Saritas
Suchandrima Banerjee
Sharmila Majumdar
Thomas M. Link
Ajit Shankaranarayanan
Christopher P. Hess
Gerd Melkus
Timothy M. Shepherd
Dimitrios C. Karampinos
William P. Dillon
Source :
NMR in Biomedicine. 26:630-637
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Wiley, 2012.

Abstract

Lower back pain is a common problem frequently encountered without specific biomarkers that correlate well with an individual patient's pain generators. MRI quantification of diffusion and T2 relaxation properties may provide novel insight into the mechanical and inflammatory changes that occur in the lumbosacral nerve roots in patients with lower back pain. Accurate imaging of the spinal nerve roots is difficult because of their small caliber and oblique course in all three planes. Two-dimensional in-plane imaging of the lumbosacral nerve roots requires oblique coronal imaging with large field of view (FOV) in both dimensions, resulting in severe geometric distortions using single-shot echo planar imaging (EPI) techniques. The present work describes initial success using a reduced-FOV single-shot spin-echo EPI acquisition to obtain in-plane diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and T2 mapping of the bilateral lumbar nerve roots at the L4 level of healthy subjects, minimizing partial volume effects, breathing artifacts and geometric distortions. A significant variation in DTI and T2 mapping metrics is also reported along the course of the normal nerve root. The fractional anisotropy is statistically significantly lower in the dorsal root ganglia (0.287 ± 0.068) than in more distal regions in the spinal nerve (0.402 ± 0.040) (p

Details

ISSN :
09523480
Volume :
26
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NMR in Biomedicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........98d17c24fde6ebec97c1378e7911ddf1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/nbm.2902