Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3983575 Clinical Radiology 2008 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

AimTo investigate the spinal cord as an alternative intra-body reference to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in evaluating thoracic disc signal intensity.Materials and methodsT2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) images of T6–T12 were obtained using 1.5 T machines for a population-based sample of 523 men aged 35–70 years. Quantitative data on the signal intensities were acquired using an image analysis program (SpEx©). A random sample of 30 subjects and intraclass correlation coeffcients (ICC) were used to examine the repeatability of the spinal cord measurements. The validity of using the spinal cord as a reference was examined by correlating cord and CSF samples. Finally, thoracic disc signal was validated by correlating it with age without adjustment and adjusting for either cord or CSF. Pearson's r was used for correlational analyses.ResultsThe repeatability of the spinal cord signal measurements was extremely high (≥0.99). The correlations between the signals of spinal cord and CSF by level were all above 0.9. The spinal cord-adjusted disc signal and age correlated similarly with CSF-adjusted disc signal and age (r = −0.30 to −0.40 versus r = −0.26 to −0.36).ConclusionAdjacent spinal cord is a good alternative reference to the current reference standard, CSF, for quantitative measurements of disc signal intensity. Clearly fewer levels were excluded when using spinal cord as compared to CSF due to missing reference samples.

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