Triple-dose Contrast-enhanced Images in Neurologically Symptomatic HIV-positive Patients
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Our purpose was to determine whether triple-dose delayed contrast-enhanced images would improve lesion detection in patients with symptomatic human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. We reviewed 33 MRI studies on 29 patients. Single-dose immediate T1-weighted spin-echo (1x-T1) images were compared with delayed triple-dose images (D3x-T1). Two neuroradiologists decided which technique showed more lesions, increased lesion conspicuity and/or altered the radiologic diagnosis. The D3x-T1 technique improved lesion detection in 14 of 29 patients (48%). In two patients (7%), the improvement changed the radiologic diagnosis by showing new meningeal lesions.
The contribution of MRI to the diagnosis of diffuse meningeal lesions.
Kreuzberg B, Kastner J, Ferda J Neuroradiology. 2004; 46(3):198-204.
PMID: 14985885 DOI: 10.1007/s00234-003-1046-5.