40 research outputs found

    Incidental findings of typical iNPH imaging signs in asymptomatic subjects with subclinical cognitive decline

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    Background!#!The etiology of idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH) remains unclear. Little is known about the pre-symptomatic stage. This study aimed to investigate the association of neuropsychological data with iNPH-characteristic imaging changes compared to normal imaging and unspecific atrophy in a healthy population.!##!Methods!#!We extracted data from the community-dwelling Austrian Stroke Prevention Family Study (ASPS-Fam) database (2006-2010). All subjects underwent a baseline and identical follow-up examination after 3-5 years with MR imaging and an extensive neuropsychological test battery (Trail Making Test B, short physical performance balance, walking speed, memory, visuo-practical skills, composite scores of executive function and g-factor). We categorized the subjects into 'iNPH'-associated, non-specific 'atrophy,' and 'normal' based on the rating of different radiological cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) space parameters. We noted how the categories developed over time. We assessed the association of the image categories with the neuropsychological data, different demographic, and lifestyle parameters (age, sex, education, alcohol intake, arterial hypertension, hypercholesterolemia), and the extent of white matter hyperintensities. We investigated whether neuropsychological data associated with the image categories were independent from other parameters as confounders.!##!Results!#!One hundred and thirteen subjects, aged 50-70 years, were examined. The imaging category 'iNPH' was only present at follow-up. A third of subjects with 'atrophy' at baseline changed to the category 'iNPH' at follow-up. More white matter hyperintensities (WMH) were present in later 'iNPH' subjects. Subjects with 'iNPH' performed worse than 'normal' subjects on executive function (p = 0.0118), memory (p = 0.0109), and Trail Making Test B (TMT-B. p < 0.0001). Education, alcohol intake, diabetes, arterial hypertension, and hypercholesterolemia had no effect. Age, number of females, and the extent of white matter hyperintensities were higher in 'iNPH' than in 'normal' subjects but did not significantly confound the neuropsychological results.!##!Conclusions!#!Apparent asymptomatic subjects with 'iNPH' imaging characteristics presented with subclinical cognitive decline and showed worse executive function, memory, and TMT-B results than 'normal' subjects. WMH seem to play a role in the etiology before ventriculomegaly. Clinical screening of individuals with incidental iNPH-characteristic imaging and conspicuous results sof these neurocognitive tests needs further validation

    Is There Any Additional Benefit of Contrast-Enhanced CT as Part of Routine PET/CT Protocols for the Differentiation of Suspicious Incidental Gastrointestinal. 2-Deoxy-F-18-FDG Uptake?

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    OBJECTIVE: Suspicious incidental gastrointestinal FDG uptake during positron-emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) examinations can be caused by different diseases, including malignancies. However, differentiation with PET alone is difficult. The aim of this study was to investigate the potential of PET alone, contrast-enhanced CT (ceCT), and low-dose CT (ldCT) in routine PET/CT protocols for differentiation of incidental gastrointestinal lesions. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixty patients with incidental gastrointestinal lesions who underwent a routine PET/CT protocol with ldCT and ceCT were retrospectively analysed. The PET lesions were evaluated regarding their FDG uptake patterns and the standard uptake value. The anatomical correlates in both CT protocols were compared in regard to the correct lesion classification with the reference standard endoscopy. RESULTS: Sixty-two lesions were found in 60 patients (17 malignant, 10 premalignant, 5 benign, 13 inflammatory, 17 physiological). The differentiation of the FDG uptake patterns did not enable reliable lesion classification. The positive predictive value for pathology was 0.81 for ceCT in PET/CT and 0.70 for ldCT. Malignancies were detected in 100% of the patients by ceCT vs. 29.4% by ldCT. The false negative rate of ceCT for all pathologies was 31.1%, vs. 68.9% for ldCT. False positive results (17/62) could not be excluded sufficiently by either CT protocol. CONCLUSION: PET/ceCT protocols provide additional benefit especially in detecting gastrointestinal malignancies as a cause of suspicious incidental gastrointestinal FDG uptake. However, since follow-up endoscopy cannot be forgone due to the considerable false negative rate even with ceCT, the addition of ceCT to a routine PET/ldCT protocol cannot be recommended for this purpose

    Respiratory Motion Correction in Oncologic PET Using T1-Weighted MR Imaging on a Simultaneous Whole-Body PET/MR System

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    Hybrid PET/MR combines the exceptional molecular sensitivity of PET with the high resolution and versatility of MR imaging. Simultaneous data acquisition additionally promises the use of MR to enhance the quality of PET images, for example, by respiratory motion correction. This advantage is especially relevant in thoracic and abdominal areas to improve the visibility of small lesions with low radiotracer uptake and to enhance uptake quantification. In this work, the applicability and performance of an MR-based method of respiratory motion correction for PET tumor imaging was evaluated in phantom and patient studies. METHODS: PET list-mode data from a motion phantom with (22)Na point sources and 5 patients with tumor manifestations in the thorax and upper abdomen were acquired on a simultaneous hybrid PET/MR system. During the first 3 min of a 5-min PET scan, the respiration-induced tissue deformation in the PET field of view was recorded using a sagittal 2-dimensional multislice gradient echo MR sequence. MR navigator data to measure the location of the diaphragm were acquired throughout the PET scan. Respiration-gated PET data were coregistered using the MR-derived motion fields to obtain a single motion-corrected PET dataset. The effect of motion correction on tumor visibility, delineation, and radiotracer uptake quantification was analyzed with respect to uncorrected and gated images. RESULTS: Image quality in terms of lesion delineation and uptake quantification was significantly improved compared with uncorrected images for both phantom and patient data. In patients, in head-feet line profiles of 14 manifestations, the slope became steeper by 66.7% (P = 0.001) and full width at half maximum was reduced by 20.6% (P = 0.001). The mean increase in maximum standardized uptake value, lesion-to-background ratio (contrast), and signal-to-noise ratio was 28.1% (P = 0.001), 24.7% (P = 0.001), and 27.3% (P = 0.003), respectively. Lesion volume was reduced by an average of 26.5% (P = 0.002). As opposed to the gated images, no increase in background noise was observed. However, motion correction performed worse than gating in terms of contrast (-11.3%, P = 0.002), maximum standardized uptake value (-10.7%, P = 0.003), and slope steepness (-19.3%, P = 0.001). CONCLUSION: The proposed method for MR-based respiratory motion correction of PET data proved feasible and effective. The short examination time and convenience (no additional equipment required) of the method allow for easy integration into clinical routine imaging. Performance compared with gating procedures can be further improved using list-mode-based motion correction

    Longitudinal Reproducibility of CO2-Triggered BOLD MRI for the Hemodynamic Evaluation of Adult Patients with Moyamoya Angiopathy

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    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Hemodynamic evaluation of moyamoya patients is crucial to decide the treatment strategy. Recently, CO2-triggered BOLD MRI has been shown to be a promising tool for the hemodynamic evaluation of moyamoya patients. However, the longitudinal reliability of this technique in follow-up examinations is unknown. This study aims to analyze longitudinal follow-up data of CO2-triggered BOLD MRI to prove the reliability of this technique for long-term control examinations in moyamoya patients. METHODS Longitudinal CO2 BOLD MRI follow-up examinations of moyamoya patients with and without surgical revascularization have been analyzed for all 6 vascular territories retrospectively. If revascularization was performed, any directly (by the disease or the bypass) or indirectly (due to change of collateral flow after revascularization) affected territory was excluded based on angiography findings (group 1). In patients without surgical revascularization between the MRI examinations, all territories were analyzed (group 2). RESULTS Eighteen moyamoya patients with 39 CO2 BOLD MRI examinations fulfilled the inclusion criteria. The median follow-up between the 2 examinations was 12 months (range 4-29 months). For 106 vascular territories analyzed in group 1, the intraclass correlation coefficient was 0.784, p < 0.001, and for group 2 (84 territories), it was 0.899, p < 0.001. Within the total follow-up duration of 140 patient months, none of the patients experienced a new stroke. CONCLUSIONS CO2 BOLD MRI is a promising tool for mid- and long-term follow-up examinations of cerebral hemodynamics in moyamoya patients. Systematic prospective evaluation is required prior to making it a routine examination
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