Optimized MRI of Patients With Hip Arthroplasty
NYU Langone Health
Summary
This is a single-center single-arm clinical trial with a paired design which compares the effectiveness of 3T MRI with (modified) and without (standard) radiofrequency pulse polarization optimization in reducing metal-related artifacts in patients with hip arthroplasty implants.
Description
Twenty participants with symptomatic primary total hip arthroplasty will be imaged with both methods. The results of the two methods will be compared in reference to the size of the artifact-degraded regions, visibility of the normal structures and the rate of abnormality detection.Primary Objective: To assess the size of the artifact-degraded regions, defined as regions of the image where underlying anatomic structure are obscured, between modified and standard MRI protocols. Secondary Objectives: (1) To assess the visibility of normal structures between modified and standard MRI protocols. (…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18–99 years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * Patients aged ≥ 18 with unilateral symptomatic (e.g. pain) total hip arthroplasty * Referred for MRI examination at the discretion of the treating physician * Provision of signed and dated informed consent form * No metal hardware in the body including contralateral hip arthroplasty * No contraindication to MRI: defined as claustrophobia or presence of other MRI-incompatible devices Exclusion Criteria: * History of revision hip arthroplasty * Pregnancy (self-reported, or self-suspected) * Hip arthroplasty surgery within one year of enrollment * Clinical indication to a…
Interventions
- DeviceModified MRI
A technical modification to the standard MRI which only affects radiofrequency pulse polarization attempting to optimize the image quality. All other factors, including pulse sequence parameters, and patient and coil positioning is similar to that of the standard MRI.
Location
- NYU Langone Radiology - Center for Biomedical ImagingNew York, New York