Enhancement of the lymphatic system following intravenous administration of ferumoxytol.

Autor: Young, Daniel F., Reddy, Surendranath Veeram, Divekar, Abhay, Vamsee, Ravi, Pimpalwar, Sheena, Hussain, Tarique, Greer, Joshua S.
Předmět:
Zdroj: Pediatric Radiology; Nov2024, Vol. 54 Issue 12, p2060-2067, 8p
Abstrakt: Background: Lymphatic imaging is becoming increasingly important in the management of patients with congenital heart disease. However, the influence of the intravenous contrast agent ferumoxytol on lymphatic imaging is not well understood. Objective: To evaluate the impact of intravenous ferumoxytol on T1-weighted and T2-weighted lymphatic imaging in patients with congenital heart disease. Materials and methods: We included consecutive patients receiving ferumoxytol-enhanced 3D angiography for congenital heart disease evaluation. The visibility of the thoracic duct was reviewed on the T1-weighted 3D inversion recovery balanced-steady-state free precession (SSFP) with respiratory navigator gating sequence which is routinely used for angiography and the heavily T2-weighted turbo spin echo sequence which is employed for lymphatic imaging. Data on demographics and time interval between contrast administration and imaging were collected. Statistical analyses were performed using t-tests for continuous variables and chi-squared tests for categorical variables. Results: One hundred nineteen consecutive patients with a mean age of 12.46 years±7.7 years were included. Of these, 45 cases underwent both T1-weighted and T2-weighted imaging; the other 74 underwent only T1-weighted imaging. Of the 45 patients, 20 had thoracic duct enhancement on T1-weighted imaging; among the 26 sedated, only 2 showed enhancement, while 18 of 19 non-sedated patients showed enhancement (P<0.001), indicating a strong association between sedation and reduced thoracic duct visibility. If T2-weighted imaging was performed after contrast administration, the thoracic duct was not visible on those images. For all 45 cases of visible thoracic duct in the entire cohort, the time from contrast administration to imaging ranged from 8 min up to 75 min. Conclusion: The enhancement of the thoracic lymphatic duct on T1-weighted imaging, coupled with degradation observed on T2-weighted imaging, suggests that intravenously administered ferumoxytol rapidly enters the lymphatic fluid. To prevent T2 shortening from degrading the imaging results, T2-weighted imaging for lymphatic evaluation should be performed prior to the administration of ferumoxytol. Sedation and, by inference, fasting may influence this property and warrant further investigation in future studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index