Susceptibility-weighted MR imaging: A better technique in the detection of capillary telangiectasia compared with t2∗ gradient-echo

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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Enhancing lesions on brain MR imaging can present a diagnostic quandary as both benign lesions such as brain capillary telangiectasia and pathologic lesions such as demyelination may appear similar. Stagnation of blood in low-flow venous channels of brain capillary telangiectasias results in susceptibility effect secondary to the increased local deoxyhemoglobin. Both T2∗ gradient-echo imaging and SWI were demonstrated as valuable in the diagnosis of brain capillary telangiectasia. Because SWI is more sensitive to susceptibility changes than gradient-echo, we aim to demonstrate increased diagnostic value of SWI compared with gradientecho in making the diagnosis of brain capillary telangiectasia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the MR images of 17 patients with a presumed diagnosis of brain capillary telangiectasia and who were examined from June 2010 to September 2012. All patients underwent MR imaging at 1.5T with T1, T2, FLAIR, gradient-echo, SWI, and gadolinium-enhanced T1 sequences. Lesions were evaluated for the presence or absence of signal abnormality on each particular sequence. RESULTS: All 17 brain capillary telangiectasias demonstrated distinct signal-intensity loss on SWI compared with 7 of 17 (41%) who showed signal-intensity loss on gradient-echo. The increased frequency of detection using SWI versus gradient-echo is statistically significant Z= 2.85, P < .01; χ2 =8.10, P

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Chaudhry, U. S., De Bruin, D. E., & Policeni, B. A. (2014). Susceptibility-weighted MR imaging: A better technique in the detection of capillary telangiectasia compared with t2∗ gradient-echo. American Journal of Neuroradiology, 35(12), 2302–2305. https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A4082

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