Litcius/Paper detail

Sodium MR Neuroimaging

Akifumi Hagiwara, Mark Bydder, Talia C. Oughourlian, Jingwen Yao, Noriko Salamon, Reza Jahan, J. Pablo Villablanca, Dieter R. Enzmann, Benjamin M. Ellingson

2021American Journal of Neuroradiology24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Sodium MR imaging has the potential to complement routine proton MR imaging examinations with the goal of improving diagnosis, disease characterization, and clinical monitoring in neurologic diseases. In the past, the utility and exploration of sodium MR imaging as a valuable clinical tool have been limited due to the extremely low MR signal, but with recent improvements in imaging techniques and hardware, sodium MR imaging is on the verge of becoming clinically realistic for conditions that include brain tumors, ischemic stroke, and epilepsy. In this review, we briefly describe the fundamental physics of sodium MR imaging tailored to the neuroradiologist, focusing on the basics necessary to understand factors that play into making sodium MR imaging feasible for clinical settings and describing current controversies in the field. We will also discuss the current state of the field and the potential future clinical uses of sodium MR imaging in the diagnosis, phenotyping, and therapeutic monitoring in neurologic diseases.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineNeuroradiologistNeuroimagingMagnetic resonance imagingClinical imagingRadiologyMedical physicsPsychiatryAdvanced MRI Techniques and ApplicationsGlioma Diagnosis and TreatmentFerroelectric and Negative Capacitance Devices