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Whenever
your doctor requires top-quality anatomic portrayal, especially
soft tissue, chances are that an MRI will be the modality
of choice. Unfortunately, the decision to prescribe or not
to prescribe an MRI will not always be made on the basis of
diagnostic quality. Sometimes, in a well-meaning attempt to
save money for the patient or the insurance company, a physician
will choose a less-expensive procedure, hoping that he or
she will receive sufficient information to make a correct
diagnosis. If the less-expensive test proves inadequate, however,
and an MRI is prescribed later, the attempt to save money
will have been futile. Even worse, the condition may be inaccurately
diagnosed using a less definitive, non-MRI procedure.
Because MRI portrays soft tissue
with such diagnostically-useful clarity, it is relied upon
frequently for revealing abdominal abnormalities-mid-field
scanners are clearly superior to high-field scanners in this
regard-and a wide variety of other ills as diverse as malfunctioning
temporomandibular joints (TMJs) in the jaw, pinched nerves
in the spinal column, heart disease and multiple sclerosis.
(Nothing is superior to MRI for revealing MS.) From the beginning,
of course, one of the great strengths of MRI has been its
ability to reveal tumors.
The second largest application
for MRI at present is musculoskeletal disease. Orthopedic
physicians regularly refer patients for MRIs for a wide variety
of conditions. That's why you hear so much, for example, about
professional athletes getting MRI scans. Many MRIs have a
new development of a number of specialized MRI diagnostic
methods used in sports medicine. These have led the way, for
example, in providing anatomical motion studies. These studies
enable technologists to electronically sequence a series of
MRI images to create an accurate portrayal of how a malfunctioning
joint in a patient is working dynamically. Individual MRI
images reveal static conditions, just as a photo snapshot
reveals a person's likeness just for an instant of time, but
misses the facial expression that occurred a second or two
earlier and the one that followed immediately after. A dynamic
portrayal of a joint helps a physician understand how a particular
joint-a shoulder, a knee, a neck or a TMJ-functions in "real
life." Incidentally, open-environment MRI scanners are
clearly superior for these motion studies as they provide
the space required for a patient to move their arm, leg or
neck through a wide range of positions.
Magnetic resonance angiography
(MRA) is a well-utilized procedure that will only increase
in use by cardiologists in the future. Although CAT scans
are better able to show calcified plaque that has built up
in an artery, physicians will increasingly turn to MRA in
the future to reveal the presence and severity of soft atherosclerotic
plaque. In other words, it will reveal newer, more recent
plaque which has formed, enabling physicians to view the extent
of artery disease more accurately and to treat that disease
more appropriately.
Nothing is superior to an MRI
for imaging breast implants. It shows the implants much more
clearly than other modalities and it has the added advantage
of not using X-rays, a particular concern when imaging the
breast. MRI is also superior to ultrasound, X-ray mammograms
or CAT scans when it comes to revealing malignancies in very
dense breasts. This is still a developing area for MRI, one
which will become much more dominant in the future.
The MRI applications mentioned
above are just a small portion of the applications for which
MRI is the modality of choice. If you have further questions,
discuss them with your physician or speak with a radiologist
who specializes in MRI. MRI is still a developing modality
whose diagnostic power is becoming more and more appreciated
with time. Already, it has replaced a great number of X-ray-based
procedures and it is certain to replace even more in the future.
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