Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Lower Vertebral Column in Patients with Multiple Myeloma
- 1 March 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Investigative Radiology
- Vol. 23 (3) , 193-199
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00004424-198803000-00007
Abstract
Eighteen patients with multiple myeloma (clinical stages 1-3) and a control group of 21 persons underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies of the lower thoracic and lumbar spine. This was done to determine the potential benefit of MRI in addition to conventional radiographs, tomograms, computed tomography and nuclear scans. In addition to focal fatty replacement of normal hematopoietic marrow, which presented as focal hyperintense lesions on T1-weighted images (T1-WI) and on T2-weighted images (T2-WI), two types of myelomatous lesions were found: (1) focal areas with reduced signal intensity when compared with normal bone marrow on T1-WI and enhanced signal intensity on T2-WI, mainly found in untreated myelomas; and (2) focal areas of decreased signal intensity on T1-WI and on T2-WI, which were predominantly detected after previous radiation therapy. MRI surpassed conventional radiography in detecting abnormal focal marrow infiltration in 41 of 247 vertebrae. Radiographs identified only 11 of the 41 as pathologic, based on shape and structure of the vertebral bodies, however, 15 other collapsed vertebrate showed no signal abnormalities of the marrow on MR images. Discrimination of normals and abnormals by statistical analysis of intensity measurements of the bone marrow was not possible.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
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