OtherBrain
Distinguishing Recurrent Intra-Axial Metastatic Tumor from Radiation Necrosis Following Gamma Knife Radiosurgery Using Dynamic Susceptibility-Weighted Contrast-Enhanced Perfusion MR Imaging
R.F. Barajas, J.S. Chang, P.K. Sneed, M.R. Segal, M.W. McDermott and S. Cha
American Journal of Neuroradiology November 2008, DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A1362
R.F. Barajas
J.S. Chang
P.K. Sneed
M.R. Segal
M.W. McDermott


This is a PDF-only article. The first page of the PDF of this article appears above.
Advertisement
R.F. Barajas, J.S. Chang, P.K. Sneed, M.R. Segal, M.W. McDermott, S. Cha
Distinguishing Recurrent Intra-Axial Metastatic Tumor from Radiation Necrosis Following Gamma Knife Radiosurgery Using Dynamic Susceptibility-Weighted Contrast-Enhanced Perfusion MR Imaging
American Journal of Neuroradiology Nov 2008, DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A1362
0 Responses
Distinguishing Recurrent Intra-Axial Metastatic Tumor from Radiation Necrosis Following Gamma Knife Radiosurgery Using Dynamic Susceptibility-Weighted Contrast-Enhanced Perfusion MR Imaging
R.F. Barajas, J.S. Chang, P.K. Sneed, M.R. Segal, M.W. McDermott, S. Cha
American Journal of Neuroradiology Nov 2008, DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A1362
Jump to section
Related Articles
Cited By...
- DSC MR Perfusion at 7T MRI: An Initial Single-Center Study for Validity and Practicability
- DSC Perfusion MRI-Derived Fractional Tumor Burden and Relative CBV Differentiate Tumor Progression and Radiation Necrosis in Brain Metastases Treated with Stereotactic Radiosurgery
- Postcontrast T1 Mapping for Differential Diagnosis of Recurrence and Radionecrosis after Gamma Knife Radiosurgery for Brain Metastasis
- Differentiation between Radiation Necrosis and Tumor Progression Using Chemical Exchange Saturation Transfer
- Classification of High-Grade Glioma into Tumor and Nontumor Components Using Support Vector Machine
- Current Applications of MRI-Guided Laser Interstitial Thermal Therapy in the Treatment of Brain Neoplasms and Epilepsy: A Radiologic and Neurosurgical Overview
- ASFNR Recommendations for Clinical Performance of MR Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast Perfusion Imaging of the Brain
- Diffusion and Perfusion MRI to Differentiate Treatment-Related Changes Including Pseudoprogression from Recurrent Tumors in High-Grade Gliomas with Histopathologic Evidence
- Utility of Intravoxel Incoherent Motion MR Imaging for Distinguishing Recurrent Metastatic Tumor from Treatment Effect following Gamma Knife Radiosurgery: Initial Experience
- Phase II Study of Bevacizumab, Temozolomide, and Hypofractionated Stereotactic Radiotherapy for Newly Diagnosed Glioblastoma
- The Effect of Pulse Sequence Parameters and Contrast Agent Dose on Percentage Signal Recovery in DSC-MRI: Implications for Clinical Applications
- Role of O-(2-18F-Fluoroethyl)-L-Tyrosine PET for Differentiation of Local Recurrent Brain Metastasis from Radiation Necrosis
- Perfusion CT Imaging of Brain Tumors: An Overview
- Percentage Signal Recovery Derived from MR Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast Imaging Is Useful to Differentiate Common Enhancing Malignant Lesions of the Brain
- Permeability Estimates in Histopathology-Proved Treatment-Induced Necrosis Using Perfusion CT: Can These Add to Other Perfusion Parameters in Differentiating from Recurrent/Progressive Tumors?
- MR Spectroscopy in Radiation Injury
This article has not yet been cited by articles in journals that are participating in Crossref Cited-by Linking.
More in this TOC Section
Similar Articles
Advertisement