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Published in: Skeletal Radiology 9/2016

01-09-2016 | Scientific Article

Utilization of chemical shift MRI in the diagnosis of disorders affecting pediatric bone marrow

Authors: Matthew Winfeld, Shivani Ahlawat, Nabile Safdar

Published in: Skeletal Radiology | Issue 9/2016

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Abstract

Objective

MRI signal intensity of pediatric bone marrow can be difficult to interpret using conventional methods. Chemical shift imaging (CSI), which can quantitatively assess relative fat content, may improve the ability to accurately diagnose bone marrow abnormalities in children.

Methods

Consecutive pelvis and extremity MRI at a children’s hospital over three months were retrospectively reviewed for inclusion of CSI. Medical records were reviewed for final pathological and/or clinical diagnosis. Cases were classified as normal or abnormal, and if abnormal, subclassified as marrow-replacing or non-marrow-replacing entities. Regions of interest (ROI) were then drawn on corresponding in and out-of-phase sequences over the marrow abnormality or over a metaphysis and epiphysis in normal studies. Relative signal intensity ratio for each case was then calculated to determine the degree of fat content in the ROI.

Results

In all, 241 MRI were reviewed and 105 met inclusion criteria. Of these, 61 had normal marrow, 37 had non-marrow-replacing entities (osteomyelitis without abscess n = 17, trauma n = 9, bone infarction n = 8, inflammatory arthropathy n = 3), and 7 had marrow-replacing entities (malignant neoplasm n = 4, bone cyst n = 1, fibrous dysplasia n = 1, and Langerhans cell histiocytosis n = 1). RSIR averages were: normal metaphyseal marrow 0.442 (0.352–0.533), normal epiphyseal marrow 0.632 (0.566–698), non-marrow-replacing diagnoses 0.715 (0.630–0.799), and marrow-replacing diagnoses 1.06 (0.867–1.26). RSIR for marrow-replacing entities proved significantly different from all other groups (p < 0.05). ROC analysis demonstrated an AUC of 0.89 for RSIR in distinguishing marrow-replacing entities.

Conclusion

CSI techniques can help to differentiate pathologic processes that replace marrow in children from those that do not.
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Metadata
Title
Utilization of chemical shift MRI in the diagnosis of disorders affecting pediatric bone marrow
Authors
Matthew Winfeld
Shivani Ahlawat
Nabile Safdar
Publication date
01-09-2016
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Skeletal Radiology / Issue 9/2016
Print ISSN: 0364-2348
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2161
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00256-016-2403-x

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