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Abstract #2255

The influence of fat-suppression on T2 values and texture features in articular cartilage

Pavol Szomolanyi1,2, Vladimir Juras1, Stefan Toegel3, Markus Schreiner3, Veronika Janacova1, Didier Laurent4, Franziska Saxer4, Rahel Heule5, Oliver Bieri6, Esther Raithel7, Christoph Fuchssteiner8, Wolfgang Weninger8, Reinhard Windhager3, and Siegfried Trattnig1,9,10,11
1Department of Biomedical Imaging and Image-guided Therapy, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 2Department of Imaging Methods, Institute of Measurement Science, Bratislava, Slovakia, 3Department of Orthopedics and Trauma Surgery, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 4Department of translational Medicine, Novartis Biomedical Research, Basel, Switzerland, 5Center for MR Research, University Children's Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland, 6Division of Radiological Physics, Department of Radiology, University of Basel Hospital, Basel, Switzerland, 7Siemens Healthcare AG, Forchheim, Germany, 8Center for Anatomy and Cell Biology, Division of Anatomy, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 9CD Laboratory for MR Imaging Biomarkers (BIOMAK), Vienna, Austria, 10Austrian Cluster for Tissue Regeneration, Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Experimental and Clinical Traumatology, Vienna, Austria, 11Institute for Clinical Molecular MRI in the Musculoskeletal System, Karl Landsteiner Society, Vienna, Austria

Synopsis

Keywords: Cartilage, Cartilage

Motivation: If fat signal is not properly suppressed, it can lead to errors in the T2 calculations in human articular cartilage.

Goal(s): This work aimed to quantify the influence of fat suppression on T2 values as well as texture features extracted from T2 maps.

Approach: Ten donors were scanned in 3T MRI with DESS, T2-TESS and CPMG with and without fat suppression.

Results: The results of this study showed the importance of using fat suppression while acquiring T2 maps. The influence of fat suppression was substantially greater for CPMG-T2-mapping compared to TESS-T2-mapping.

Impact: If fat signal is not properly suppressed, it can lead to errors in the T2 calculations in human articular cartilage which can have a significant impact on longitudinal clinical trials.

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Keywords