Renal MRI Protocol



RENAL MRI TECHNIQUE:




In MRI of the kidneys, fast imaging techniques are essential because of respiratory motion of the kidneys . When possible the scan should be performed within one breath-hold. The patient should get clear instructions on breath-hold technique. If the patient has difficulty with breath-holding, a short period of hyperventilation before breath-holding may be helpful. The scan should be performed during expiration because the kidney position is more constant in expiration than in inspiration. If the sequence is too long to perform in one breath-hold, respiratory triggering can be used. Another technique of respiratory motion control is respiratory gating by use of a navigator pulse. In this technique the movement of the diaphragm is monitored by a very fast 1D MRI sequence. If breath-holding is not possible, signal averaging can be used, but the quality of the images will be limited. The use of a phased array body coil is preferable because of the improved signal-to-noise ratio. To prevent aliasing in coronal imaging, the patient’s arms should be raised above the head, or the arms may be supported by cushions, anterior to the coronal plane through the kidneys.


Sample Renal MR Protocol


PLAIN
1.Coronal T2-weighted half Fourier single-shot turbo spin echo sequence (HASTE) 
2.Axial T2-weighted turbo spin echo sequence with fat suppression 
3.Axial T1-weighted gradient echo sequence, in-phase and opposed-phase


Pre and Post Gadolinium axial 
Optional


1. GRE T1-Opposed phase axial-DYNAMIC IMAGING
2. 3D MRA coronal
3.Coronal 3D fast gradient echo with fat suppression


  1. Coronal T2-weighted half Fourier single-shot turbo spin echo sequence (HASTE) (TR infinite, TE 120 ms, flip angle 90°, breath-hold), serving as a localizer, but also supplying valuable T2-weighted information. The limitation of this sequence is a relatively low signal-to-noise ratio.

  2. Axial T2-weighted turbo spin echo sequence with fat suppression (TR 2,000 ms, TE 100 ms, flip angle 90°, respiratory triggering). This sequence provides for more detailed T2-weighted information. The T2-weighted sequence is especially helpful in characterizing cysts and intraparenchymal abscesses and in evaluating hydronephrosis. Furthermore, the T2-weighted sequence is helpful in detecting solid lesions.

  3. Axial T1-weighted gradient echo sequence, in-phase and opposed-phase (TR 180 ms, TE 2.3 ms/4.6 ms, flip angle 90°, breath-hold), preferably as a dual-echo sequence. Many solid renal lesions are hypointense compared to the renal parenchyma on T1-weighted images, but lesions with hemorrhage, lesions with macroscopic fat, melanin-containing lesions and cysts with high protein content may show hyperintense signal . Opposed-phase T1-weighted gradient echo sequences can be used to prove the presence of small amounts of fat.

  4. Axial T1-weighted gradient echo sequence for dynamic imaging (TR 130 ms, TE 1.0 ms, flip angle 90°), using 30 ml intravenous gadolinium contrast, immediately followed by three breath-hold periods with four scan series per breath-hold. In this way pre-contrast and post-contrast images in arterial and nephrographic phase are obtained. Gadolinium-enhanced images are used for lesion detection and characterization.

  5. Coronal 3D fast gradient echo with fat suppression, obtained immediately after the dynamic series for delayed contrast-enhanced images (TR 3 ms, TE 2 ms, flip angle 15°). This sequence can be used for renal venous anatomy, for the analysis of (tumor) thrombus and for evaluation of extent of the tumor in the perinephric fat.
Currently 1- to 1.5-T systems are generally used for abdominal imaging, but the advent of 3-T MRI systems brings a twofold increase in the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The increase in SNR can be spent on higher resolution or on even faster imaging. When combined with parallel imaging techniques such as sensitivity encoding (SENSE), the speed of any sequence can be increased by up to a factor of four or higher. However, although 3-T MRI is promising, only a limited amount of research has been published on 3-T MR imaging for renal lesions, and its value has still to be established 

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