Magnetic Resonance in Medical Sciences
Online ISSN : 1880-2206
Print ISSN : 1347-3182
ISSN-L : 1347-3182
Major Papers
Comparison of True FISP with Turbo SE in Ovarian Imaging
Masaaki HORITomoaki ICHIKAWAKatsuhiro SANOTsutomu ARAKIKazunori KASAIMasato ASHIZAWAKazuhiko KUWAMOTO
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JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS

2004 Volume 3 Issue 3 Pages 119-124

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Abstract

Purpose: To compare the signal pattern of True FISP (true fast imaging with steady state precession) with that of T2-weighted TSE (turbo spin echo) sequencing in several ovarian pathologies and to clarify the pathologies that may be misdiagnosed when True FISP is used as a fast T2-weighted MR (magnetic resonance) imaging technique.
Methods: A total of 56 patients with 58 ovarian lesions were prospectively studied. The histopathological diagnoses were surgically confirmed in all patients. All MR images were acquired with a 1.5T MR scanner. After routine MR examination (T2-weighted sagittal imaging with a turbo spin echo sequence and T1 and T2 transverse imaging with a spin echo and turbo spin echo sequence, respectively), True FISP was performed in the sagittal plane with a fat-saturation technique. The acquisition times for the True FISP and TSE techniques were 27 s and 4 min, 42 s, respectively. Three radiologists interpreted all images according to three grading scores and with particular reference to the difference in signal pattern between the two sequences (1=similar signal patterns in the ovarian lesions in both True FISP and TSE images; 2=partially different signal patterns in both True FISP and TSE images; and 3=conflicting signal patterns in both True FISP and TSE images).
Results: Those assigned a score of “1” included 30 patients with 30 ovarian lesions (12 malignant lesions and 18 benign lesions); those assigned a score of “2” included 10 patients with 10 lesions (two malignant and eight benign); and those assigned a score of “3” included 16 patients with 18 ovarian lesions (two malignant and 16 benign). With the influence of the fat-suppression technique excluded, eight ovarian lesions showed conflicting signal patterns between the two sequences and high signal intensity of hemorrhaging in the corresponding lesion in T1-weighted images. Lesions of both high and low signal intensity in TSE images appeared as lesions of high signal intensity in True FISP images. About 14% (8/56 lesions) of the True FISP and TSE signal patterns in ovarian pathology were conflicting in this study.
Conclusion: The results indicate that the True FISP technique cannot replace the T2-weighted TSE technique in the evaluation of ovarian pathology. T1-weighted images with or without fat suppression are required for the evaluation of ovarian lesions with FISP images.

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© 2004 by Japanese Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
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