Is Gadolinium Necessary for White Matter Tract Imaging?
Sat Dec 28 2024
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You’re at the doctor’s office, and they want to look closely at the white matter tracts in your brain, like the corticospinal tract (which helps with moving your body) and the medial lemniscus (which is all about feelings like temperature and touch). They use a special type of brain scan called delayed enhanced heavily T2-weighted three-dimensional fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (DE-hT2w-3D-FLAIR) imaging. This scan is great for looking at inner ear fluids in people who might have Ménière's disease. But does giving patients an injection of a substance called gadolinium four hours before the scan make a difference in how well these white matter tracts show up?
Researchers decided to find out. They looked back at the medical records of nine people who had this type of scan at a hospital with a 3-Tesla magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machine. They compared pictures taken both with and without gadolinium. They focused on the signal intensities of the white matter tracts compared to nearby brain areas like the thalamus, pontine parenchyma, and cerebellar parenchyma.
Guess what? They found that whether gadolinium was used or not, the signal intensities didn't change much. The corticospinal tract to thalamus ratio was about 3. 75 without gadolinium and 3. 62 with it. For the medial lemniscus to pontine parenchyma, it was around 2. 19 and 2. 08, respectively. And for the superior cerebellar peduncle to cerebellar parenchyma, it was about 4. 08 without and 4. 04 with gadolinium. These slight differences weren't statistically significant.
So, what does this mean? It means that using gadolinium might not be necessary for seeing the white matter tracts clearly with this type of brain scan. Maybe in the future, doctors can use this info to make scans easier and safer for patients.
https://localnews.ai/article/is-gadolinium-necessary-for-white-matter-tract-imaging-9593f04f
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