European Radiology Experimental (Jan 2024)

Time-of-flight and black-blood MRI to study intracranial arteries in rats

  • Anne F. Cayron,
  • Olivia Bejuy,
  • Maria Isabel Vargas,
  • Didier J. Colin,
  • Tomohiro Aoki,
  • Karl-Olof Lövblad,
  • Philippe Bijlenga,
  • Brenda R. Kwak,
  • Eric Allémann,
  • Sandrine Morel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41747-023-00407-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Intracranial aneurysms (IAs) are usually incidentally discovered by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Once discovered, the risk associated with their treatment must be balanced with the risk of an unexpected rupture. Although clinical observations suggest that the detection of contrast agent in the aneurysm wall using a double-inversion recovery black-blood (BB) sequence may point to IA wall instability, the exact meaning of this observation is not understood. Validation of reliable diagnostic markers of IA (in)stability is of utmost importance to deciding whether to treat or not an IA. To longitudinally investigate IA progression and enhance our understanding of this devastating disease, animal models are of great help. The aim of our study was to improve a three-dimensional (3D)-time-of-flight (TOF) sequence and to develop a BB sequence on a standard preclinical 3-T MRI unit to investigate intracranial arterial diseases in rats. We showed that our 3D-TOF sequence allows reliable measurements of intracranial artery diameters, inter-artery distances, and angles between arteries and that our BB sequence enables us to visualize intracranial arteries. We report the first BB-MRI sequence to visualize intracranial arteries in rats using a preclinical 3-T MRI unit. This sequence could be useful for a large community of researchers working on intracranial arterial diseases. Relevance statement We developed a black-blood MRI sequence to study vessel wall enhancement in rats with possible application to understanding IAs instability and finding reliable markers for clinical decision-making. Key points • Reliable markers of aneurysm stability are needed for clinical decision. • Detection of contrast enhancement in the aneurysm wall may be associated with instability. • We developed a black-blood MRI sequence in rats to be used to study vessel wall enhancement of IAs. Graphical Abstract

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