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"Dynamic ABER" sequence using gradient recalled echo radial k-space sampling for kinematic evaluation of humeral excursion related to the glenoid: a feasibility study in 15 patients with a 3-year follow-up
Zech, John R; Walter, William R; Novogrodsky, Eitan; Bruno, Mary; Babb, James; Burke, Christopher John
BackgroundRapid real-time magnetic resonance (MR) sequences enable dynamic articular kinematic assessment. The abduction-external rotation (ABER) position has long been used to characterize glenohumeral pathology.PurposeTo evaluate a dynamic gradient recall echo (GRE) sequence for ABER-positioned glenohumeral joint kinematic assessment correlating with subjective instability and clinical apprehension testing.Material and MethodsSymptomatic patients were scanned using a routine MR arthrogram protocol supplemented by an additional "dynamic ABER" GRE technique acquired with the arm abducted and then internally-externally rotated in real time. Dynamic motion of the humeral head between the extremes of motion in the abducted and externally rotated positions was evaluated. The cohort was followed for 3 years.ResultsA total of 15 dynamic ABER studies in 15 different patients were evaluated by three readers (right: n=9; left: n=6), with a mean age of 30 years (range=19-45 years). Good accuracy of the humeral head excursion between the abducted and externally-internally rotated positions (AUC=0.88) was observed as a test for positively detecting instability. An association was detected between clinical instability and mean humeral head excursion as measured by all three readers (P = 0.026), although no association between positive apprehension testing and mean humeral head excursion was detected. There was a trend towards surgery-naïve patients with higher mean humeral head excursion subsequently undergoing surgical management (P=0.088), although this did not reach statistical significance.ConclusionCorrelation between subjective instability and humeral head translation demonstrated on a dynamic ABER sequence added to MR shoulder arthrograms was observed but without association with clinical apprehension testing.
PMID: 40298322
ISSN: 1600-0455
CID: 5833422
Low-field MRI lung opacity severity associated with decreased DLCO in post-acute Covid-19 patients
Azour, Lea; Segal, Leopoldo N; Condos, Rany; Moore, William H; Landini, Nicholas; Collazo, Destiny; Sterman, Daniel H; Young, Isabel; Ko, Jane; Brosnahan, Shari; Babb, James; Chandarana, Hersh
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To evaluate the clinical significance of low-field MRI lung opacity severity. METHODS:Retrospective cross-sectional analysis of post-acute Covid-19 patients imaged with low-field MRI from 9/2020 through 9/2022, and within 1 month of pulmonary function tests (PFTs), 6-min walk test (6mWT), and symptom inventory (SI), and/or within 3 months of St. George Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) was performed. Univariate and correlative analyses were performed with Wilcoxon, Chi-square, and Spearman tests. The association between disease and demographic factors and MR opacity severity, PFTs, 6mWT, SI, and SGRQ, and association between MR opacity severity with functional and patient-reported outcomes (PROs), was evaluated with mixed model analysis of variance, covariance and generalized estimating equations. Two-sided 5 % significance level was used, with Bonferroni multiple comparison correction. RESULTS:81 MRI exams in 62 post-acute Covid-19 patients (median age 57, IQR 41-64; 25 women) were included. Exams were a median of 8 months from initial illness. Univariate analysis showed lung opacity severity was associated with decreased %DLCO (ρ = -0.55, P = .0125), and lung opacity severity quartile was associated with decreased %DLCO, predicted TLC, FVC, and increased FEV1/FVC. Multivariable analysis adjusting for sex, initial disease severity, and interval from Covid-19 diagnosis showed MR lung opacity severity was associated with decreased %DLCO (P < .001). Lung opacity severity was not associated with PROs. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Low-field MRI lung opacity severity correlated with decreased %DLCO in post-acute Covid-19 patients, but was not associated with PROs.
PMID: 39383681
ISSN: 1873-4499
CID: 5706142
Retrospective analysis of Braak stage- and APOE4 allele-dependent associations between MR spectroscopy and markers of tau and neurodegeneration in cognitively unimpaired elderly
Chen, Anna M; GajdoÅ¡Ãk, Martin; Ahmed, Wajiha; Ahn, Sinyeob; Babb, James S; Blessing, Esther M; Boutajangout, Allal; de Leon, Mony J; Debure, Ludovic; Gaggi, Naomi; GajdoÅ¡Ãk, Mia; George, Ajax; Ghuman, Mobeena; Glodzik, Lidia; Harvey, Patrick; Juchem, Christoph; Marsh, Karyn; Peralta, Rosemary; Rusinek, Henry; Sheriff, Sulaiman; Vedvyas, Alok; Wisniewski, Thomas; Zheng, Helena; Osorio, Ricardo; Kirov, Ivan I
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease (AD), amyloid, tau, and associated neurodegeneration, are present in the cortical gray matter (GM) years before symptom onset, and at significantly greater levels in carriers of the apolipoprotein E4 (APOE4) allele. Their respective biomarkers, A/T/N, have been found to correlate with aspects of brain biochemistry, measured with magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), indicating a potential for MRS to augment the A/T/N framework for staging and prediction of AD. Unfortunately, the relationships between MRS and A/T/N biomarkers are unclear, largely due to a lack of studies examining them in the context of the spatial and temporal model of T/N progression. Advanced MRS acquisition and post-processing approaches have enabled us to address this knowledge gap and test the hypotheses, that glutamate-plus-glutamine (Glx) and N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA), metabolites reflecting synaptic and neuronal health, respectively, measured from regions on the Braak stage continuum, correlate with: (i) cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) p-tau181 level (T), and (ii) hippocampal volume or cortical thickness of parietal lobe GM (N). We hypothesized that these correlations will be moderated by Braak stage and APOE4 genotype. METHODS:We conducted a retrospective imaging study of 34 cognitively unimpaired elderly individuals who received APOE4 genotyping and lumbar puncture from pre-existing prospective studies at the NYU Grossman School of Medicine between October 2014 and January 2019. Subjects returned for their imaging exam between April 2018 and February 2020. Metabolites were measured from the left hippocampus (Braak II) using a single-voxel semi-adiabatic localization by adiabatic selective refocusing sequence; and from the bilateral posterior cingulate cortex (PCC; Braak IV), bilateral precuneus (Braak V), and bilateral precentral gyrus (Braak VI) using a multi-voxel echo-planar spectroscopic imaging sequence. Pearson and Spearman correlations were used to examine the relationships between absolute levels of choline, creatine, myo-inositol, Glx, and NAA and CSF p-tau181, and between these metabolites and hippocampal volume or parietal cortical thicknesses. Covariates included age, sex, years of education, Fazekas score, and months between CSF collection and MRI exam. RESULTS:There was a direct correlation between hippocampal Glx and CSF p-tau181 in APOE4 carriers (Pearson's r = 0.76, p = 0.02), but not after adjusting for covariates. In the entire cohort, there was a direct correlation between hippocampal NAA and hippocampal volume (Spearman's r = 0.55, p = 0.001), even after adjusting for age and Fazekas score (Spearman's r = 0.48, p = 0.006). This relationship was observed only in APOE4 carriers (Pearson's r = 0.66, p = 0.017), and was also retained after adjustment (Pearson's r = 0.76, p = 0.008; metabolite-by-carrier interaction p = 0.03). There were no findings in the PCC, nor in the negative control (late Braak stage) regions of the precuneus and precentral gyrus. CONCLUSIONS:Our findings are in line with the spatially- and temporally-resolved Braak staging model of pathological severity in which the hippocampus is affected earlier than the PCC. The correlations, between MRS markers of synaptic and neuronal health and, respectively, T and N pathology, were found exclusively within APOE4 carriers, suggesting a connection with AD pathological change, rather than with normal aging. We therefore conclude that MRS has the potential to augment early A/T/N staging, with the hippocampus serving as a more sensitive MRS target compared to the PCC.
PMCID:11404707
PMID: 39029606
ISSN: 1095-9572
CID: 5695972
Low Field MRI Surveillance 6-24 Months Post-acute COVID-19 Pneumonia: Factors Influencing Severity and Evolution of Lung Opacities
Azour, Lea; Chandarana, Hersh; Maier, Christoph; Babb, James; Moore, William
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To determine factors influencing low-field MRI lung opacity severity 6-24 months after acute Covid-19 pneumonia. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:104 post-acute Covid-19 patients with 167 MRI exams were included. 32 patients had more than one exam, and 63 exams were serial exams. Pulmonary findings were graded on a scale of 0-4 by quadrant, total score ranging from 0 (no opacity) to 16 (opacity > 75%), and score >8 considered moderate and >12 severe opacity. Kruskal-Wallis, Mann-Whitney, and Spearman rank correlation was used to assess the association of clinical and demographic factors with MR opacity severity at time intervals from acute infection. Random coefficients regression was used to assess whether opacity score changed over time. RESULTS:Severity of initial illness was associated with increased MR opacity score at timeframes up to 24 months (p < .05). Among the 167 exams, moderate to severe MR opacities (total opacity score >8) were identified in 33% of exams beyond 6 months: 37% at 6 - <12 months (n = 23/63); 31% at 12- < 18 months (n = 13/42); 25% at 18- < 24 months (n = 6/24); and 50% at > 24 months (n = 3/6). No significant change in total opacity score over time was identified by random coefficients regression. Among the 32 patients with serial exams, 11 demonstrated no change in opacity score from initial to final exam, 10 decrease in score (mean 2.3, stdev 1.25, range 1-4), and 11 increase in score (average 2.8, stdev 1.48, range 1-7). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Initial Covid-19 disease severity was associated with increased MRI total opacity score at time intervals up to 24 months, and moderate to severe opacities were commonly identified by low-field MRI beyond 6 months from acute illness.
PMID: 38443207
ISSN: 1878-4046
CID: 5694532
Spatial profiling of in vivo diffusion-weighted MRI parameters in the healthy human kidney
Gilani, Nima; Mikheev, Artem; Brinkmann, Inge M; Kumbella, Malika; Babb, James S; Basukala, Dibash; Wetscherek, Andreas; Benkert, Thomas; Chandarana, Hersh; Sigmund, Eric E
OBJECTIVE:Diffusion-weighted MRI is a technique that can infer microstructural and microcirculatory features from biological tissue, with particular application to renal tissue. There is extensive literature on diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) of anisotropy in the renal medulla, intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) measurements separating microstructural from microcirculation effects, and combinations of the two. However, interpretation of these features and adaptation of more specific models remains an ongoing challenge. One input to this process is a whole organ distillation of corticomedullary contrast of diffusion metrics, as has been explored for other renal biomarkers. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:In this work, we probe the spatial dependence of diffusion MRI metrics with concentrically layered segmentation in 11 healthy kidneys at 3 T. The metrics include those from DTI, IVIM, a combined approach titled "REnal Flow and Microstructure AnisotroPy (REFMAP)", and a multiply encoded model titled "FC-IVIM" providing estimates of fluid velocity and branching length. RESULTS:Fractional anisotropy decreased from the inner kidney to the outer kidney with the strongest layer correlation in both parenchyma (including cortex and medulla) and medulla with Spearman correlation coefficients and p-values (r, p) of (0.42, <0.001) and (0.37, <0.001), respectively. Also, dynamic parameters derived from the three models significantly decreased with a high correlation from the inner to the outer parenchyma or medulla with (r, p) ranges of (0.46-0.55, <0.001). CONCLUSIONS:These spatial trends might find implications for indirect assessments of kidney physiology and microstructure using diffusion MRI.
PMID: 38703246
ISSN: 1352-8661
CID: 5733822
Utility of a 2D kinematic HASTE sequence in magnetic resonance imaging assessment of adjacent segment degeneration following anterior cervical discectomy and fusion
Burke, Christopher J; Samim, Mohammad; Babb, James S; Walter, William R
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To evaluate a dynamic half-Fourier acquired single turbo spin echo (HASTE) sequence following anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) at the junctional level for adjacent segment degeneration comparing dynamic listhesis to radiographs and assessing dynamic cord contact and deformity during flexion-extension METHODS: Patients with ACDF referred for cervical spine MRI underwent a kinematic flexion-extension sagittal 2D HASTE sequence in addition to routine sequences. Images were independently reviewed by three radiologists for static/dynamic listhesis, and compared to flexion-extension radiographs. Blinded assessment of the HASTE sequence was performed for cord contact/deformity between neutral, flexion, and extension, to evaluate concordance between readers and inter-modality agreement. Inter-reader agreement for dynamic listhesis and impingement grade and inter-modality agreement for dynamic listhesis on MRI and radiographs was assessed using the kappa coefficient and percentage concordance. RESULTS:A total of 28 patients, mean age 60.2 years, were included. Mean HASTE acquisition time was 42 s. 14.3% demonstrated high grade dynamic stenosis (> grade 4) at the adjacent segment. There was substantial agreement for dynamic cord impingement with 70.2% concordance (kappa = 0.62). Concordance across readers for dynamic listhesis using HASTE was 81.0% (68/84) (kappa = 0.16) compared with 71.4% (60/84) (kappa = 0.40) for radiographs. Inter-modality agreement between flexion-extension radiographs and MRI assessment for dynamic listhesis across the readers was moderate (kappa = 0.41; 95% confidence interval: 0.16 to 0.67). CONCLUSIONS:A sagittal flexion-extension HASTE cine sequence provides substantial agreement between readers for dynamic cord deformity and moderate agreement between radiographs and MRI for dynamic listhesis. CLINICAL RELEVANCE STATEMENT/CONCLUSIONS:Degeneration of the adjacent segment with instability and myelopathy is one of the most common causes of pain and neurological deterioration requiring re-operation following cervical fusion surgery. KEY POINTS/CONCLUSIONS:• A real-time kinematic 2D sagittal HASTE flexion-extension sequence can be used to assess for dynamic listhesis, cervical cord, contact and deformity. • The additional kinematic cine sequence was well tolerated and the mean acquisition time for the 2D HASTE sequence was 42 s (range 31-44 s). • A sagittal flexion-extension HASTE cine sequence provides substantial agreement between readers for dynamic cord deformity and moderate agreement between radiographs and MRI for dynamic listhesis.
PMID: 37594524
ISSN: 1432-1084
CID: 5619202
Efficacy and Impact of a Multimodal Intervention on CT Pulmonary Angiography Ordering Behavior in the Emergency Department
Gyftopoulos, Soterios; Simon, Emma; Swartz, Jordan L; Smith, Silas W; Martinez, Leticia Santos; Babb, James S; Horwitz, Leora I; Makarov, Danil V
OBJECTIVE:To evaluate the efficacy of a multimodal intervention in reducing CT pulmonary angiography (CTPA) overutilization in the evaluation of suspected pulmonary embolism in the emergency department (ED). METHODS:Previous mixed-methods analysis of barriers to guideline-concordant CTPA ordering results was used to develop a provider-focused behavioral intervention consisting of a clinical decision support tool and an audit and feedback system at a multisite, tertiary academic network. The primary outcome (guideline concordance) and secondary outcomes (yield and CTPA and D-dimer order rates) were compared using a pre- and postintervention design. ED encounters for adult patients from July 5, 2017, to January 3, 2019, were included. Fisher's exact tests and statistical process control charts were used to compare the pre- and postintervention groups for each outcome. RESULTS:Of the 201,912 ED patient visits evaluated, 3,587 included CTPA. Guideline concordance increased significantly after the intervention, from 66.9% to 77.5% (P < .001). CTPA order rate and D-dimer order rate also increased significantly, from 17.1 to 18.4 per 1,000 patients (P = .035) and 30.6 to 37.3 per 1,000 patients (P < .001), respectively. Percent yield showed no significant change (12.3% pre- versus 10.8% postintervention; P = .173). Statistical process control analysis showed sustained special-cause variation in the postintervention period for guideline concordance and D-dimer order rates, temporary special-cause variation for CTPA order rates, and no special-cause variation for percent yield. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Our success in increasing guideline concordance demonstrates the efficacy of a mixed-methods, human-centered approach to behavior change. Given that neither of the secondary outcomes improved, our results may demonstrate potential limitations to the guidelines directing the ordering of CTPA studies and D-dimer ordering.
PMID: 37247831
ISSN: 1558-349x
CID: 5543162
Cardiac MRI of characteristic motion findings in right bundle branch block
Axel, Leon; Kanski, Mikael; Gomez, Geraldine Villasana; Gozansky, Elliott; Babb, James S
While there have been many descriptions of characteristic motion findings in left bundle branch block (LBBB), there are few published descriptions of such findings in right bundle branch block (RBBB). The purpose of this study was to assess the frequency of particular regional motion findings in cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) studies of patients with RBBB, compared with normal subjects. We focused on three distinctive motion patterns that can be seen in RBBB during early systole: delayed apex-ward motion of the RV base, "reverse septal flash", and "basal bulge". The presence and relative magnitude of these findings were independently scored by four experienced observers, in 3-chamber and 4-chamber CMR cines, for both normal subjects and patients with RBBB. These motion patterns were found to be strongly associated with the presence of RBBB. While only moderately sensitive, they were quite specific for RBBB, when present. In particular, with ROC analysis, a combined feature set of the findings in the 4-chamber view had an area under the curve of 0.81.This previously undescribed set of RBBB-associated early-systolic regional motion features (delayed apex-ward motion of the RV base, "reverse septal flash", and "basal bulge") is strongly suggestive of RBBB when present, particularly in the 4-chamber view. Although here evaluated with CMR, it is also likely to be associated with RBBB when seen with other cardiac imaging modalities.
PMID: 37891449
ISSN: 1875-8312
CID: 5736352
FDG-PET/MRI for the preoperative diagnosis and staging of peritoneal carcinomatosis: a prospective multireader pilot study
Vietti Violi, Naik; Gavane, Somali; Argiriadi, Pamela; Law, Amy; Heiba, Sherif; Bekhor, Eliahu Y; Babb, James S; Ghesani, Munir; Labow, Daniel M; Taouli, Bachir
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:To assess the diagnostic performance of FDG-PET/MRI for the preoperative diagnosis and staging of peritoneal carcinomatosis (PC) using surgical Sugarbaker's PC index (PCI) as the reference in a multireader pilot study. METHODS:Fourteen adult patients (M/F: 3/11, mean age: 57 ± 12 year) with PC were prospectively included in this single-center study. Patients underwent FDG-PET/MRI prior to surgery (mean delay: 14 d, range: 1-63 d). Images were reviewed independently by 2 abdominal radiologists and 2 nuclear medicine physicians. The radiologists assessed contrast-enhanced abdominal MR images, while the nuclear medicine physicians assessed PET images fused with T2-weighted images. The abdomen was divided in 13 regions, scored from 0 to 3. A hybrid FDG-PET/MRI radiological PCI was created by combining the study data. Radiological PCI was compared to the surgical PCI on a per-patient and per-region basis. Inter-reader agreement was evaluated. RESULTS:Mean surgical PCI was 10 ± 8 (range: 0-24). Inter-reader agreement was almost perfect for all sets for radiologic PCI (Kappa: 0.81-0.98). PCI scores for all reading sets significantly correlated with the surgical PCI score (r range: 0.57-0.74, p range: < 0.001-0.003). Pooled per-patient sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were 75%/50%/71.4% for MRI, 66.7%/50%/64.3% for FDG-PET, and 91.7%/50%/85.7% for FDG-PET/MRI, without significant difference (p value range 0.13-1). FDG-PET/MRI achieved 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity for a cutoff PCI of 20. Per-region sensitivity and accuracy were lower: 37%/61.8% for MRI, 17.8%/64.3% for FDG-PET, and 52.7%/60.4% for FDG-PET/MRI, with significantly higher sensitivity for FDG-PET/MRI. Per-region specificity was higher for FDG-PET (95%) compared to MRI (78.4%) and FDG-PET/MRI (66.5%). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:FDG-PET/MRI achieved an excellent diagnostic accuracy per-patient and weaker performance per-region for detection of PC. The added value of PET/MRI compared to MRI and FDG-PET remains to be determined.
PMID: 36308554
ISSN: 2366-0058
CID: 5359752
Differentiating Imaging Features of Post-lobectomy Right Middle Lobe Torsion
Tamizuddin, Farah; Ocal, Selin; Toussie, Danielle; Azour, Lea; Wickstrom, Maj; Moore, William H; Kent, Amie; Babb, James; Fansiwala, Kush; Flagg, Eric; Ko, Jane P
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The purpose of this study was to identify differences in imaging features between patients with confirmed right middle lobe (RML) torsion compared to those suspected yet without torsion. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:This retrospective study entailing a search of radiology reports from April 1, 2014, to April 15, 2021, resulted in 52 patients with suspected yet without lobar torsion and 4 with confirmed torsion, supplemented by 2 additional cases before the search period for a total of 6 confirmed cases. Four thoracic radiologists (1 an adjudicator) evaluated chest radiographs and computed tomography (CT) examinations, and Fisher exact and Mann-Whitney tests were used to identify any significant differences in imaging features (P<0.05). RESULTS:A reversed halo sign was more frequent for all readers (P=0.001) in confirmed RML torsion than patients without torsion (83.3% vs. 0% for 3 readers, one the adjudicator). The CT coronal bronchial angle between RML bronchus and bronchus intermedius was larger (P=0.035) in torsion (121.28 degrees) than nontorsion cases (98.26 degrees). Patients with torsion had a higher percentage of ground-glass opacity in the affected lobe (P=0.031). A convex fissure towards the adjacent lobe on CT (P=0.009) and increased lobe volume on CT (P=0.001) occurred more often in confirmed torsion. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:A reversed halo sign, larger CT coronal bronchial angle, greater proportion of ground-glass opacity, fissural convexity, and larger lobe volume on CT may aid in early recognition of the rare yet highly significant diagnosis of lobar torsion.
PMID: 37732714
ISSN: 1536-0237
CID: 5614062