Index by author
September 01, 2018; Volume 39,Issue 9
Islak, C.
- NeurointerventionYou have accessIntracranial Serpentine Aneurysms: Spontaneous Changes of Angiographic Filling PatternS.G. Kandemirli, S. Cekirge, I. Oran, I. Saatci, O. Kizilkilic, C. Cinar, C. Islak and N. KocerAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology September 2018, 39 (9) 1662-1668; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5746
Iv, M.
- FELLOWS' JOURNAL CLUBAdult BrainYou have accessEvaluation of Thick-Slab Overlapping MIP Images of Contrast-Enhanced 3D T1-Weighted CUBE for Detection of Intracranial Metastases: A Pilot Study for Comparison of Lesion Detection, Interpretation Time, and Sensitivity with Nonoverlapping CUBE MIP, CUBE, and Inversion-Recovery-Prepared Fast-Spoiled Gradient Recalled Brain VolumeB.C. Yoon, A.F. Saad, P. Rezaii, M. Wintermark, G. Zaharchuk and M. IvAmerican Journal of Neuroradiology September 2018, 39 (9) 1635-1642; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5747
The authors performed a retrospective review of 48 patients with cerebral metastases from June 2016 to October 2017. Brain MRIs included gadolinium-enhanced T1-weighted IR-FSPGR-BRAVO and CUBE, with subsequent generation of nonoverlapping CUBE MIP and overlapping CUBE MIP. Two blinded radiologists identified the total number and location of metastases on each image type. This study suggests that the use of overlapping CUBE MIP or nonoverlapping CUBE MIP for the detection of brain metastases can reduce interpretation time without sacrificing sensitivity, though the contrast-to-noise ratio of lesions is highest for overlapping CUBE MIP.
In this issue
American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 39, Issue 9
1 Sep 2018
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