Authors
FH Blankenstein, B Truong, A Thomas, RJ Schröder, M Naumann
Publication date
2006/8/1
Journal
RoFo: Fortschritte auf dem Gebiete der Rontgenstrahlen und der Nuklearmedizin
Volume
178
Issue
8
Pages
787-793
Description
Purpose
To measure the maximum extent of the signal loss areas in the center of the susceptibility artifacts generated by ferromagnetic dental magnet attachments using three different sequences in the 1.5 and 3.0 Tesla MRI.
Materials and methods
Five different pieces of standard dental magnet attachments with volumes of 6.5 to 31.4 mm (3) were used: a NdFeB magnet with an open magnetic field, a NdFeB magnet with a closed magnetic field, a SmCo magnet with an open magnetic field, a stainless steel keeper (AUM-20) and a PdCo piece. The attachments were placed between two cylindrical phantoms and examined in 1.5 and 3.0 Tesla MRI using gradient echo and T1-and T2-weighted spin echoes. We measured the maximum extent of the generated signal loss areas parallel and perpendicular to the direction of B (O).
Results
In gradient echoes the artifacts were substantially larger and symmetrically adjusted around the object. The areas with total signal loss were mushroom-like with a maximum extent of 7.4 to 9.7 cm parallel to the direction of B (O) and 6.7 to 7.4 cm perpendicular to B (O). In spin echoes the signal loss areas were obviously smaller, but not centered. The maximum values ranged between 4.9 and 7.2 cm (parallel B (O)) and 3.6 and 7.0 cm (perpendicular B (O)). The different ferromagnetic attachments had no clinically relevant influence on the signal loss neither in 1.5 T nor 3.0 T MRI.
Conclusions
Ferromagnetic materials used in dentistry are not intraorally standardized. To ensure, that the area of interest is not affected by the described artifacts, the maximum extent of the signal loss area should be assumed: a radius of up to …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
FH Blankenstein, B Truong, A Thomas, RJ Schröder… - RoFo: Fortschritte auf dem Gebiete der …, 2006