Abstract
A high-resolution three-dimensional surface gradient coil set was used to obtain magnetic resonance (MR) images of breast specimens, using a gradient-echo pulse sequence (TR/TE 1000/8 msec, flip angle 75°), with 117 μm in-plane resolution and 1 mm slice thickness. Breast tissues were obtained from one autopsy and three surgical specimens. High-resolution breast MR images and histopathology sections (7 μm thickness) were acquired in the same anatomical plane. Radiographs were acquired of the sliced specimens (approximately 5 mm thick) so that images from all three methods could be correlated. It was found that in vitro high-resolution breast MRI correlated well with low-resolution microscopic histology, demonstrating normal anatomy (lobules, ducts, connective tissue strands, blood vessels) and pathology (tumor content, margins, and presence of microcalcifications) of the breast more clearly than conventional pre-gadolinium breast MRI. High- resolution breast MRI may improve specificity, when added to a conventional breast MRI protocol. (C) 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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Holland, A. E., Hendrick, R. E., Jin, H., Russ, P. D., Barentsz, J. O., & Holland, R. (2000). Correlation of high-resolution breast MR imaging with histopathology; Validation of a technique. Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, 11(6), 601–606. https://doi.org/10.1002/1522-2586(200006)11:6<601::AID-JMRI5>3.0.CO;2-G
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