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Erschienen in: European Radiology 4/2008

01.04.2008 | Magnetic Resonance

Prospective navigator-echo-based real-time triggering of fetal head movement for the reduction of artifacts

verfasst von: H. Bonel, K. A. Frei, L. Raio, M. Meyer-Wittkopf, L. Remonda, R. Wiest

Erschienen in: European Radiology | Ausgabe 4/2008

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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the neuroimaging quality and accuracy of prospective real-time navigator-echo acquisition correction versus untriggered intrauterine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques. Twenty women in whom fetal motion artifacts compromised the neuroimaging quality of fetal MRI taken during the 28.7 ± 4 week of pregnancy below diagnostic levels were additionally investigated using a navigator-triggered half-Fourier acquired single-shot turbo-spin echo (HASTE) sequence. Imaging quality was evaluated by two blinded readers applying a rating scale from 1 (not diagnostic) to 5 (excellent). Diagnostic criteria included depiction of the germinal matrix, grey and white matter, CSF, brain stem and cerebellum. Signal-difference-to-noise ratios (SDNRs) in the white matter and germinal zone were quantitatively evaluated. Imaging quality improved in 18/20 patients using the navigator echo technique (2.4 ± 0.58 vs. 3.65 ± 0.73 SD, p < 0.01 for all evaluation criteria). In 2/20 patients fetal movement severely impaired image quality in conventional and navigated HASTE. Navigator-echo imaging revealed additional structural brain abnormalities and confirmed diagnosis in 8/20 patients. The accuracy improved from 50% to 90%. Average SDNR increased from 0.7 ± 7.27 to 19.83 ± 15.71 (p < 0.01). Navigator-echo-based real-time triggering of fetal head movement is a reliable technique that can deliver diagnostic fetal MR image quality despite vigorous fetal movement.
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Metadaten
Titel
Prospective navigator-echo-based real-time triggering of fetal head movement for the reduction of artifacts
verfasst von
H. Bonel
K. A. Frei
L. Raio
M. Meyer-Wittkopf
L. Remonda
R. Wiest
Publikationsdatum
01.04.2008
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
European Radiology / Ausgabe 4/2008
Print ISSN: 0938-7994
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1084
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-007-0812-x

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