Showing posts with label MR Imaging Technique of the Scrotum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MR Imaging Technique of the Scrotum. Show all posts

MR Imaging Technique of the Scrotum


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At our institution, a 1.5-T magnet is used for imaging the scrotum. The patient is placed supine on the table feet first. A folded towel is placed between the patient's thighs to elevate the scrotum to a horizontal plane. The penis is taped to the abdominal wall out of the area of interest. A 12.5-cm circular multipurpose surface coil is centered over the scrotum, with the bottom of the coil over the caudal tip of the scrotum. Axial and coronal T1- and T2-weighted images are acquired with a 16-cm field of view and a 4-mm section thickness. Additionally, axial fat-suppressed T1-weighted images are obtained. High-resolution dual-echo (in-phase and out-of-phase) axial T1-weighted spoiled gradient-echo sequences are also used to identify fat-water admixtures. These sequences also help to depict hemorrhage because hemosiderin will be most conspicuous on gradient-echo images because of T2* effects. Gadolinium-enhanced imaging is routinely performed at our institution after checking the patient's glomerular filtration rate, to avoid nephrogenic systemic fibrosis. Ideally, the unenhanced images should first be reviewed by a radiologist, and intravenous gadolinium-based contrast material should be administered only when indeterminate pathologic conditions are identified. Fat-suppressed, contrast-enhanced, three-dimensional (3D) T1-weighted fast spoiled gradient-recalled-echo (FSPGR) images are acquired in the axial and coronal planes. In addition, non–fat-suppressed contrast-enhanced FSPGR images are acquired in the sagittal plane.
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