- Liu, Xinke;
- Feng, Junqiang;
- Li, Zhixin;
- Zhang, Zihao;
- Zhang, Qiang;
- Jiang, Yuhua;
- Huo, Xiaochuan;
- Chai, Xubin;
- Wu, Yue;
- Kong, Qingle;
- Liu, Peng;
- Ge, Huijian;
- Jin, Hengwei;
- An, Jing;
- Jiang, Peng;
- Saloner, David A;
- Li, Youxiang;
- Zhu, Chengcheng
Background
This study was performed to quantify intracranial aneurysm wall thickness (AWT) and enhancement using 7T MRI, and their relationship with aneurysm size and type.Methods
27 patients with 29 intracranial aneurysms were included. Three-dimensional T1 weighted pre- and post-contrast fast spin echo with 0.4 mm isotropic resolution was used. AWT was defined as the full width at half maximum on profiles of signal intensity across the aneurysm wall on pre-contrast images. Enhancement ratio (ER) was defined as the signal intensity of the aneurysm wall over that of the brain parenchyma. The relationships between AWT, ER, and aneurysm size and type were investigated.Results
7T MRI revealed large variations in AWT (range 0.11-1.24 mm). Large aneurysms (>7 mm) had thicker walls than small aneurysms (≤7 mm) (0.49±0.05 vs 0.41±0.05 mm, p<0.001). AWT was similar between saccular and fusiform aneurysms (p=0.546). Within each aneurysm, a thicker aneurysm wall was associated with increased enhancement in 28 of 29 aneurysms (average r=0.65, p<0.05). Thicker walls were observed in enhanced segments (ER >1) than in non-enhanced segments (0.53±0.09 vs 0.38±0.07 mm, p<0.001).Conclusion
Improved image quality at 7T allowed quantification of intracranial AWT and enhancement. A thicker aneurysm wall was observed in larger aneurysms and was associated with stronger enhancement.