Index by author
Boto, J.
- EDITOR'S CHOICESpine Imaging and Spine Image-Guided InterventionsYou have accessFeasibility of a Synthetic MR Imaging Sequence for Spine ImagingM.I. Vargas, M. Drake-Pérez, B.M.A Delattre, J. Boto, K.-O. Lovblad and S. BoudabousAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology September 2018, 39 (9) 1756-1763; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5728
Thirty-eight patients with clinical indications of infectious, degenerative, and neoplastic disease underwent an MR imaging of the spine. The SyntAc sequence, with an acquisition time of 5 minutes 40 seconds, was added to the usual imaging protocol consisting of conventional sagittal T1 TSE, T2 TSE, and STIR TSE. The image quality was rated as “good” for both synthetic and conventional images. Interreader agreement concerning lesion conspicuity was good with a Cohen kappa of 0.737. The authors conclude that the study shows that synthetic MR imaging is feasible in spine imaging and produces, in general, good image quality and diagnostic confidence.
Boudabous, S.
- EDITOR'S CHOICESpine Imaging and Spine Image-Guided InterventionsYou have accessFeasibility of a Synthetic MR Imaging Sequence for Spine ImagingM.I. Vargas, M. Drake-Pérez, B.M.A Delattre, J. Boto, K.-O. Lovblad and S. BoudabousAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology September 2018, 39 (9) 1756-1763; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5728
Thirty-eight patients with clinical indications of infectious, degenerative, and neoplastic disease underwent an MR imaging of the spine. The SyntAc sequence, with an acquisition time of 5 minutes 40 seconds, was added to the usual imaging protocol consisting of conventional sagittal T1 TSE, T2 TSE, and STIR TSE. The image quality was rated as “good” for both synthetic and conventional images. Interreader agreement concerning lesion conspicuity was good with a Cohen kappa of 0.737. The authors conclude that the study shows that synthetic MR imaging is feasible in spine imaging and produces, in general, good image quality and diagnostic confidence.
Boujan, T.
- Extracranial VascularYou have accessValue of Contrast-Enhanced MRA versus Time-of-Flight MRA in Acute Ischemic Stroke MRIT. Boujan, U. Neuberger, J. Pfaff, S. Nagel, C. Herweh, M. Bendszus and M.A. MöhlenbruchAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology September 2018, 39 (9) 1710-1716; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5771
Bruesewitz, M.R.
- Head and Neck ImagingOpen AccessComparison of a Photon-Counting-Detector CT with an Energy-Integrating-Detector CT for Temporal Bone Imaging: A Cadaveric StudyW. Zhou, J.I. Lane, M.L. Carlson, M.R. Bruesewitz, R.J. Witte, K.K. Koeller, L.J. Eckel, R.E. Carter, C.H. McCollough and S. LengAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology September 2018, 39 (9) 1733-1738; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5768
Bulut, E.
- Pediatric NeuroimagingYou have accessBrachial Plexus Ultrasound and MRI in Children with Brachial Plexus Birth InjuryA. Gunes, E. Bulut, A. Uzumcugil and K.K. OguzAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology September 2018, 39 (9) 1745-1750; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5749