Title: MR Enterography
1MR Enterography
- Inflammatory Bowel Disease
2Why? What the clinician wants to know
- Presence, localization, and extent of disease
- Complications strictures, abscesses, fistulas
- Disease activity active vs fibrotic
3How to do it?
- Patient prep
- Bowel prep day before low residue diet, fluids,
laxative - Overnight fasting or NPO 4-6 hrs prior to study
- Oral contrast
- Water results in inadequate distention, long
transit time - Biphasic oral contrast agents
- Different signal intensities on different
sequences (low T1, bright T2) - VoLumen - a low-conc barium (0.1 weight/volume)
that contains sorbitol (CHOP, Emory 2007) - Mannitol, sorbitol and polyethylene glycol have
been used to slow down intestinal reabsorption of
water - Can cause N/V, diarrhea, cramping
4How to do it?
- Prone positioning
- Glucagon IM or IV
- to stop peristalsis
- ½ dose before study starts, ½ dose prior to
contrast - Timing
- Typical adult 1-1.5 L over 45-90 min
- Child 1 L one hour prior to exam
- Filling of TI occurs in kids at 20-25 minutes,
adults 1 hour - Rectal contrast water enema for better
distention of colon, TI - not generally used unless incomplete colonoscopy
- MR Entercolysis improved bowel distention (esp
jejunum) - Invasive, time consuming
5Egleston Protocol
- No patient prep
- Oral contrast Kool-aide with gastroview
- Powerade/gatorade cannot be used due to
susceptibility artifact - Timing
- 2 doses first dose wait one hour, then drink ½
scan 30 minutes later - Ex 24/12
- Volume and timing same as CT guidelines
- No glucagon
- Supine position
- Magnevist
6Sequences
- T2w HASTE (haste, spair)
- TrueFISP (trufi, space)
- Post contrast
- Axial and coronal planes
- Coronal plane good for terminal ileum, appy good
overview - Sagittal thru pelvis
7HASTE
haste non FS spair - FS
- Fast
- High contrast between bowel lumen and wall
- Best sequence for determining bowel wall
thickness - Fluid collections
- Submucosal edema (spair)
- Sensitive to intraluminal flow voids
- Poor evaluation of mesentery
8TrueFISP
trufi space - pelvis
- Fast
- Relatively motion insensitive
- High contrast between small bowel lumen and bowel
walls - Homogeneous endoluminal opacification
- Good mesenteric anatomy (LAN, comb sign, vessels)
- Susceptibility artifacts from intraluminal air
- Chemical shift artifacts black boundary
- Occurs in pixels with fat water
- Improved with FS
9Post contrast VIBE FLASH
- Venous, delayed for bowel (enteric phase at 75
sec post gad) - VIBE 3D more motion sensitive
- FLASH 2D, thicker slices, but relatively motion
insensitive (Shiran insurance plan) - Combination of FS and low SI intraluminal
contrast increase the ability to detect wall
enhancement - Active vs fibrotic disease
- Bowel wall enhancement in active disease and
fibrotic disease - Stratification can indicate active disease
- Enhancing mesenteric adenopathy sign of active
disease - Complications fistulas, abscess best seen post
gad
10Pelvis T1 axial FS, high res
- Post gad T1 images are better for the pelvis than
the gradient echo (VIBE and FLASH) - Gas/stool in rectum degrade images thru the
pelvis due to susceptibility artifact on the
gradient echo images - Motion is not usually a big issue in pelvis
11MR Features IBD
- Transmural bowel wall thickening, thickened folds
- Cobblestone
- Submucosal Edema use spair images indicates
active dz - Mesenteric changes
- Fat wrapping/creeping fat
- Lymphadenopathy
- Vascular hyperemia comb sign
- Complications
- Strictures
- Fistulas
- Abscess
Early disease with mucosal ulceration and
nodularity is not well seen on MR
12Fold thickening ulceration
- Deep ulcerations focal linear areas of high SI
through thickened bowel wall - Normal bowel wall and folds are low SI on both
the true FISP and HASTE images
13Deep ulcerations
14Bowel wall thickening
- gt 3 mm abnormal
- Most patients in crohns 5-10 mm
Marked wall thickening terminal ileum
15Bowel wall thickening
Coronal true-FISP (A) and axial HASTE (B) images
shows polypoid thickening of the cecal wall
(arrows). Compare this with the normal wall
thickness of the descending colon (arrowhead).
16Mesenteric changes
- TrueFISP
- Small mesenteric lymph nodes
- Comb sign
- Small lymph nodes seen in active and chronic
disease - Enhancement LN suggest active disease
17Mesenteric changes
T1 and true FISP comb sign and creeping fat
18Mesenteric changes
19Active vs. Chronic post contrast images
- Post contrast images
- Fibrosis low level, mild to moderate
inhomogeneous enhancement - Active disease homogeneous intense enhancement
or stratified enhancement
20Ileal and appendix dz
haste
Post gad
haste
Post gad
21Active vs ChronicSubmucosal Edema
- D. Martin RSNA 2007
- TI post gad very sensitive for detection of IBD
but spair better for determining active vs
chronic - Submucosal edema classic finding in active
inflammation - Use spair images (haste fs) to detect submucosal
edema - Study found many false positives for post gad
- T2 images better correlated with active vs
inactive disease
22Active vs Chronic
haste
Post gad venous
-enhancing abnl loop post gad -no edema on
spair -thus FIBROTIC disease
Spair/haste FS
23Enhancement
Stratified enhancement (c,d) indicative of active
disease.
24Stratified Enhancement active disease
25Complications - strictures
- Coronal images good for looking for strictures
- gt 3 cm bowel distention upstream indicates
functional obstruction
26Complications Star sign internal fistula
Post gad
Star sign of internal fistula Patient had
entero-entero fistula
HASTE
27Complications perianal dz
HASTE
Fistula post gad
FS post gad
28Complications perianal fistula
spair
Post gad
29Complications perianal fistula on T2 images
30Complications perianal abscess
31Complications phelgmon/abscess
Post-gad
trueFISP
Medial wall of terminal ileum is partially
indistinct and bulging medially suggesting
phlegmon/early abscess.
32Pitfalls
- Incomplete luminal distention
- Can mimic bowel wall thickening
- Black border artifact on trueFISP can over
estimate wall thickness - use HASTE for wall thickness
- Intraluminal flow artifact on HASTE can simulate
cobblestone - Check TrueFISP
- Fistula can be missed since not dynamic
33Pitfalls
- True FISP MR image shows extensive susceptibility
artifacts generated by trapped endoluminal air - Susceptibility artifact
- Signal dropout
- Bright spots
- Spatial distortion
34Pitfalls artifacts
HASTE
TruFISP
Arrowheads black boundary Arrow
susceptibility artifact from trapped air
curved arrow on both TI thickening
35Summary
- Haste, trufi and post contrast images to identify
abnormal bowel - Coronal images good for terminal ileum, overall
picture - Evaluate for strictures
- Look for associated mesenteric changes
- Active vs fibrotic
- Haste vs spair ?submucosal edema
- Stratification of edema post contrast
- Use space, T1 post gad high res images to look
for perianal disease - Post contrast images for fistula, abscess
36References
- Prassopoulos P, Papanikolaou N, Grammatikakis J,
Rousomoustakaki M, Maris T, Gourtsoyiannis N. MR
enteroclysis imaging of Crohn disease.
RadioGraphics 200121(Spec Issue)S161S172 - Essary B, Kim J, Anupindi S, et al. Pelvic MRI in
children with Crohn disease and suspected
perianal involvement. Pediatr Radiol.
200737201208 - Darge K, Anupindi S, Jaramillo D. MR Imaging of
the Bowel Pediatric Applications. MRI Clinics N
America.200816(3)467-478 - Toma P, Granata C, Magnano G, Barabino A. CT and
MRI of paediatric Crohn disease. Pediatr Radiol.
2007371065-1189. - Greenhalgh R, Punwani S, Austin C Halligan S,
Taylor S. The MRI manifestations of small bowel
Crohns disease revealed. Presented at RSNA
2007. - Udayasankar U, Lauenstein T, Martin D. Role of
SPAIR T2 fat suppressed MR imaging in active
inflammatory bowel disease. Presented at RSNA
2007. - Herrmann K, Michaely H, Seiderer J, et al. The
star-sign in magnetic resonance enteroclysis a
characteristic finding of internal fistulae in
Crohn's disease. Scand J Gastroenterol.
200641239241
37Good resource
- http//lakeside2007.rsna.org/
- Electronic posters and papers through RSNA
website - Lakeside Learning Center
- Radiographics password
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