Multispectral diffusion-weighted MRI of the instrumented cervical spinal cord: a preliminary study of 5 cases. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • PURPOSE: Diffusion-weighted imaging has undergone substantial investigation as a potential tool for advanced assessment of spinal cord health. Unfortunately, commonly encountered surgically implanted spinal hardware has historically disrupted these studies. This preliminary investigation applies the recently developed multispectral diffusion-weighted PROPELLER technique to quantitative assessment of the spinal cord immediately adjacent to metallic spinal fusion instrumentation. METHODS: Morphological and diffusion-weighted MRI of the spinal cord was collected from 5 subjects with implanted cervical spinal fusion hardware. Conventional and multispectral diffusion-weighted images were also collected on a normative non-instrumented control cohort and utilized for methodological stability analysis. Variance of the ADC values derived from the normative control group was then analyzed on a subject-by-subject basis and qualitatively correlated with clinical morphological interpretations. RESULTS: Normative control ADC values within the spinal cord were stable across DWI methods for a b value of 600 s/mm2, though this stability degraded at lower b value levels. Susceptibility artifacts precluded conventional DWI analysis of the cord in subjects with spinal fusion hardware in 4 of the 5 test cases. On the contrary, multispectral PROPELLER DWI produced viable ADC measurements within the cord of all 5 instrumented subjects. Instrumented cord regions without obvious pathology (N = 4) showed ADC values that were lower than expected, whereas one subject with diagnosed myelomalacia showed abnormally elevated ADC. CONCLUSIONS: In the absence of instrumentation, multispectral DWI provides quantitative capabilities that match with those of conventional DWI approaches. In a preliminary instrumented subject analysis, cord ADC values showed both expected and unexpected variations from the normative cohort. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.

publication date

  • December 12, 2019

Research

keywords

  • Cervical Cord
  • Spinal Cord Diseases

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC7225051

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85076835282

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1007/s00586-019-06239-z

PubMed ID

  • 31832875

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 29

issue

  • 5