AI Article Synopsis

  • Study compared ADC values from 1.5 T and 3 T MRI systems, including a newer 3 T with dual-source RF techniques, using data from 150 patients and 19 volunteers.
  • The results showed nearly identical ADC values between the 1.5 T and new 3 T system for most regions, with statistical tests confirming no significant differences.
  • However, the first generation 3 T system showed significant differences in ADC values compared to the other two systems, particularly in patient scans.
  • Overall, the new 3 T scanner proved to provide results comparable to the 1.5 T system for abdominal imaging.

Article Abstract

Background: To retrospectively and prospectively compare abdominal apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values obtained within in a 1.5 T system and 3 T systems with and without dual-source parallel RF excitation techniques.

Methodology/principal Findings: After IRB approval, diffusion-weighted (DW) images of the abdomen were obtained on three different MR systems (1.5 T, a first generation 3 T, and a second generation 3 T which incorporates dual-source parallel RF excitation) on 150 patients retrospectively and 19 volunteers (57 examinations total) prospectively. Seven regions of interest (ROI) were throughout the abdomen were selected to measure the ADC. Statistical analysis included independent two-sided t-tests, Mann-Whitney U tests and correlation analysis. In the DW images of the abdomen, mean ADC values were nearly identical with nonsignificant differences when comparing the 1.5 T and second generation 3 T systems in all seven anatomical regions in the patient population and six of the seven in the volunteer population (p>0.05 in all distributions). The strength of correlation measured in the volunteer population between the two scanners in the kidneys ranged from r = 0.64-0.88 and in the remaining regions (besides the spleen), r>0.85. In the patient population the first generation 3 T scanner had different mean ADC values with significant differences (p<0.05) compared to the other two scanners in each of the seven distributions. In the volunteer population, the kidneys shared similar ADC mean values in comparison to the other two scanners with nonsignificant differences.

Conclusions/significance: A second generation 3 T scanner with dual-source parallel RF excitation provides nearly identical ADC values compared with the 1.5 T imaging system in abdominal imaging.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3290586PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0032613PLOS

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