Renal BOLD-MRI does not reflect renal function in chronic kidney disease

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Abstract

Renal blood oxygen level-dependent magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-MRI) is a noninvasive fast technique to characterize renal function. Here we evaluated the impact of renal function on the relaxation rate (R2*) in the cortex and medulla to provide baseline data for further use of renal BOLD-MRI. This parameter was evaluated in 400 patients scheduled for abdominal imaging who underwent transversal blood oxygen level-dependent measurements with a multi-echo gradient-echo sequence with 12 echo times. The loss of phase coherence (T2*) maps were generated in which kidney regions of interest were selected to differentiate the medulla and cortex, and R2* was equated to 1/T2*. Individual R2* values were, in turn, correlated to the eGFR (MDRD formula of 280 patients with available serum creatinine measurements), age, and gender each for 1.5 and 3.0 T field-strength scans of 342 patients. At both the field strengths, no significant differences in R2* of the cortex and medulla were found between patient gender, age, eGFR, or between different stages of chronic kidney disease determined using the KDOQI system. Thus, BOLD-MRI of a non-specific patient population failed to discriminate between the patients with various stages of chronic kidney disease. © 2012 International Society of Nephrology.

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Michaely, H. J., Metzger, L., Haneder, S., Hansmann, J., Schoenberg, S. O., & Attenberger, U. I. (2012). Renal BOLD-MRI does not reflect renal function in chronic kidney disease. Kidney International, 81(7), 684–689. https://doi.org/10.1038/ki.2011.455

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