Abstract
Rationale and Objectives. Cardiac and respiratory controlled MR-imaging is the gold standard for imaging of cardiac masses. However, this technique may be limited in patients with dyspnoe or arrhythmia. The aim of this study was the evaluation of an interactive MR-approach for the detection and localization of cardiac masses. Methods. Interactive real-time spiral gradient-echo (spiralGE) and radial steady-state-free-precession (radialSSFP) MR-imaging was performed during free-breathing and without cardiac triggering in 15 patients with 14 intracardiac or paracardiac masses. Standard cardiac triggered segmented k-space breath-hold steady-state-free-precession cine MR-imaging was used as the reference MR-imaging technique. Two groups of investigators blinded to clinical data were ask to rank image quality and to identify cardiac masses on real-time MR-images. Results. Image quality was superior using radialSSFP when compared with spiralGE. Using radialSSFP all masses were correctly detected while 6 of 14 masses were missed on spiralGE. Mean real-time MR-imaging time was less than 3 minutes for both techniques. Conclusion. Interactive real-time radialSSFP MR-imaging allows for accurate and fast detection of cardiac masses without the need of cardiac or respiratory triggering
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 288 - 292 |
Number of pages | 5 |
Journal | Investigative Radiology |
Volume | 38 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 May 2003 |