4.5 Review

Four-dimensional MRI flow examinations in cerebral and extracerebral vessels - ready for clinical routine?

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN NEUROLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 4, Pages 419-428

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/WCO.0000000000000341

Keywords

4-dimensional flow MRI; cerebrovascular disease; hemodynamics; intracranial and extracranial

Funding

  1. AHA [14PRE18370014, 13GRNT1734 0018]
  2. Radiological Society of North America Research Seed Grant [RSD1207]
  3. Department of Radiology Seed Grant (Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine)
  4. NIH [R01 HL115828]

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Purpose of review To evaluate the feasibility of 4-dimensional (4D) flow MRI for the clinical assessment of cerebral and extracerebral vascular hemodynamics in patients with neurovascular disease. Recent findings 4D flow MRI has been applied in multiple studies to qualitatively and quantitatively study intracranial aneurysm blood flow for potential risk stratification and to assess treatment efficacy of various neurovascular lesions, including intraaneurysmal and parent artery blood flow after flow diverter stent placement and staged embolizations of arteriovenous malformations and vein of Galen aneurysmal malformations. Recently, the technique has been utilized to characterize age-related changes of normal cerebral hemodynamics in healthy individuals over a broad age range. Summary 4D flow MRI is a useful tool for the noninvasive, volumetric and quantitative hemodynamic assessment of neurovascular disease without the need for gadolinium contrast agents. Further improvements are warranted to overcome technical limitations before broader clinical implementation. Current developments, such as advanced acceleration techniques (parallel imaging and compressed sensing) for faster data acquisition, dual or multiple velocity encoding strategies for more accurate arterial and venous flow quantification, ultrahigh-field strengths to achieve higher spatial resolution and streamlined postprocessing workflow for more efficient and standardized flow analysis, are promising advancements in 4D flow MRI.

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