PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Ali, S. AU - Cashen, T.A. AU - Carroll, T.J. AU - McComb, E. AU - Muzaffar, M. AU - Shaibani, A. AU - Walker, M.T. TI - Time-Resolved Spinal MR Angiography: Initial Clinical Experience in the Evaluation of Spinal Arteriovenous Shunts AID - 10.3174/ajnr.A0639 DP - 2007 Oct 01 TA - American Journal of Neuroradiology PG - 1806--1810 VI - 28 IP - 9 4099 - http://www.ajnr.org/content/28/9/1806.short 4100 - http://www.ajnr.org/content/28/9/1806.full SO - Am. J. Neuroradiol.2007 Oct 01; 28 AB - BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Spinal arteriovenous shunts usually require digital subtraction angiography (DSA) for evaluation. We report a unique time-resolved spinal MR angiographic (TRSMRA) technique with a temporal resolution of 3–6 seconds and spatial resolution of approximately 1 mm3 that has the potential to noninvasively detect, localize, and follow-up these cases.MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eleven patients with clinical presentation and/or MR findings suspicious for a spinal arteriovenous shunt were referred for TRSMRA. Patients subsequently underwent spinal DSA to confirm the presence or absence of a shunt or were followed clinically until an alternative diagnosis was found. TRSMRA was also used to predict the level of the shunt in the positive cases. In addition, 2 of these patients as well as a 12th patient referred to us posttreatment received a follow-up TRSMRA to assess treatment outcome.RESULTS: Early venous shunting was identified by using TRSMRA in 6 cases. All 6 were confirmed to have an AV shunt on subsequent spinal DSA. The shunt level predicted by TRSMRA consistently correlated with DSA to within 1 vertebral level. In the 5 patients with a negative screening TRSMRA, DSA or clinical outcome confirmed the absence of an arteriovenous shunt in all of the cases. Posttreatment TRSMRA in 3 patients accurately assessed the success or failure of treatment.CONCLUSION: Combining acceleration techniques to achieve high frame rate TRSMRA provides sufficient temporal and spatial resolution to identify, localize, and follow patients suspected of having a spinal arteriovenous shunt. Further study in a larger population is warranted to assess the accuracy of this technique.