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American Journal of Neuroradiology

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Research ArticleHEAD AND NECK

Pediatric Head and Neck Lesions: Assessment of Vascularity by MR Digital Subtraction Angiography

Weng Kong Chooi, Neil Woodhouse, Stuart C. Coley and Paul D. Griffiths
American Journal of Neuroradiology August 2004, 25 (7) 1251-1255;
Weng Kong Chooi
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Neil Woodhouse
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Stuart C. Coley
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Paul D. Griffiths
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Pediatric head and neck lesions can be difficult to characterize on clinical grounds alone. We investigated the use of dynamic MR digital subtraction angiography as a noninvasive adjunct for the assessment of the vascularity of these abnormalities.

METHODS: Twelve patients (age range, 2 days to 16 years) with known or suspected vascular abnormalities were studied. Routine MR imaging, time-of-flight MR angiography, and MR digital subtraction angiography were performed in all patients. The dynamic sequence was acquired in two planes at one frame per second by using a thick section (6–10 cm) selective radio-frequency spoiled fast gradient-echo sequence and an IV administered bolus of contrast material. The images were subtracted from a preliminary mask sequence and viewed as a video-inverted cine loop.

RESULTS: In all cases, MR digital subtraction angiography was successfully performed. The technique showed the following: 1) slow flow lesions (two choroidal angiomas, eyelid hemangioma, and scalp venous malformation); 2) high flow lesions that were not always suspected by clinical examination alone (parotid hemangioma, scalp, occipital, and eyelid arteriovenous malformations plus a palatal teratoma); 3) a hypovascular tumor for which a biopsy could be safely performed (Burkitt lymphoma); and 4) a hypervascular tumor of the palate (cystic teratoma).

CONCLUSION: Our early experience suggests that MR digital subtraction angiography can be reliably performed in children of all ages without complication. The technique provided a noninvasive assessment of the vascularity of each lesion that could not always have been predicted on the basis of clinical examination or routine MR imaging alone.

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American Journal of Neuroradiology: 25 (7)
American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 25, Issue 7
1 Aug 2004
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Cite this article
Weng Kong Chooi, Neil Woodhouse, Stuart C. Coley, Paul D. Griffiths
Pediatric Head and Neck Lesions: Assessment of Vascularity by MR Digital Subtraction Angiography
American Journal of Neuroradiology Aug 2004, 25 (7) 1251-1255;

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Pediatric Head and Neck Lesions: Assessment of Vascularity by MR Digital Subtraction Angiography
Weng Kong Chooi, Neil Woodhouse, Stuart C. Coley, Paul D. Griffiths
American Journal of Neuroradiology Aug 2004, 25 (7) 1251-1255;
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