Clinical Intravoxel Incoherent Motion and Diffusion MR Imaging: Past, Present, and Future.
Mami Iima,Denis Le Bihan +1 more
TL;DR: A review of the clinical literature, mainly focusing on current outstanding issues, is given, followed by some innovative proposals for future improvements.
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Abstract: The concept of diffusion magnetic resonance (MR) imaging emerged in the mid-1980s, together with the first images of water diffusion in the human brain, as a way to probe tissue structure at a microscopic scale, although the images were acquired at a millimetric scale. Since then, diffusion MR imaging has become a pillar of modern clinical imaging. Diffusion MR imaging has mainly been used to investigate neurologic disorders. A dramatic application of diffusion MR imaging has been acute brain ischemia, providing patients with the opportunity to receive suitable treatment at a stage when brain tissue might still be salvageable, thus avoiding terrible handicaps. On the other hand, it was found that water diffusion is anisotropic in white matter, because axon membranes limit molecular movement perpendicularly to the nerve fibers. This feature can be exploited to produce stunning maps of the orientation in space of the white matter tracts and brain connections in just a few minutes. Diffusion MR imaging is now also rapidly expanding in oncology, for the detection of malignant lesions and metastases, as well as monitoring. Water diffusion is usually largely decreased in malignant tissues, and body diffusion MR imaging, which does not require any tracer injection, is rapidly becoming a modality of choice to detect, characterize, or even stage malignant lesions, especially for breast or prostate cancer. After a brief summary of the key methodological concepts beyond diffusion MR imaging, this article will give a review of the clinical literature, mainly focusing on current outstanding issues, followed by some innovative proposals for future improvements.
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Citations
IVIM-Morph: Motion-compensated quantitative Intra-voxel Incoherent Motion (IVIM) analysis for functional fetal lung maturity assessment from diffusion-weighted MRI data
Noga Kertes,Yael Zaffrani-Reznikov,Onur Afacan,Sila Kurugol,Simon K. Warfield,Moti Freiman +5 more
TL;DR: IVIM-morph, a self-supervised deep neural network model for motion-corrected quantitative analysis of DWI data using the Intra-voxel Incoherent Motion (IVIM) model, shows potential in developing valuable biomarkers for non-invasive assessment of fetal lung maturity with DWI data.
Diagnostic efficiency of intravoxel incoherent motion-based virtual magnetic resonance elastography in pulmonary neoplasms
Gang Niu,Yonghao Du,Ting Liang,Xuyin Zhang,Yinxia Guo,Jian Yang,Xianjun Li,Gang Niu +7 more
TL;DR: Non-invasive vMRE demonstrated diagnostic efficiency in differentiating the nature of pulmonary neoplasm and is promising as a new method for clinical diagnosis.
Intravoxel incoherent motion diffusion-weighted imaging for assessment of histologic grade of hepatocellular carcinoma: comparison of three methods for positioning region of interest
Yi Wei,Feifei Gao,Min Wang,Zixing Huang,Hehan Tang,Jiaxing Li,Yi Wang,Tong Zhang,Xiaocheng Wei,Dandan Zheng,Bin Song +10 more
TL;DR: Different ROI positioning methods used significantly affect the IVIM parameters and ADC measurements, and IVIM model is advantageous over mono-exponential model for assessing the histologic grade of hepatocellular carcinoma.
Intratumoral heterogeneity and hypoxia gene expression signatures: Is a single biopsy adequate?
Jelena Lukovic,Jelena Lukovic,Kathy Han,Kathy Han,Melania Pintilie,Naz Chaudary,Richard P. Hill,Richard P. Hill,Anthony Fyles,Anthony Fyles,Michael Milosevic,Michael Milosevic +11 more
TL;DR: A single biopsy may not accurately reflect the global hypoxia status of a tumor due to intratumoral heterogeneity, so the use of multiple biopsies provides greater assurance in correctly classifying a tumor as more or less hypoxic.
On the signal-to-noise ratio benefit of spiral acquisition in diffusion MRI.
Yoojin Lee,Bertram J. Wilm,David O. Brunner,Simon Gross,Thomas Schmid,Zoltan Nagy,Klaas P. Pruessmann +6 more
TL;DR: The purpose of this study is to verify the signal‐to‐noise ratio (SNR) benefit of spiral acquisition in comparison with current echo‐planar imaging (EPI) schemes.
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