Lea Alhilali, MD Profile picture
Oct 18 20 tweets 8 min read Read on X
1/Do radiologists sound like they are speaking a different language when they talk about MRI?

T1 shortening what? T2 prolongation who?

Here’s a translation w/an introductory thread to MRI. Image
2/Let’s start w/T1—it is #1 after all! T1 is for anatomy

Since it’s anatomic, brain structures will reflect the same color as real life

So gray matter is gray on T1 & white matter is white on T1

So if you see an image where gray is gray & white is white—you know it’s a T1 Image
3/T1 is also for contrast

Contrast material helps us to see masses

Contrast can’t get into normal brain & spine bc of the blood brain barrier—but masses don’t have a blood brain barrier, so when you give contrast, masses will take it up & light up, making them easier to see. Image
4/So to review, T1 is for anatomy and contrast

I remember this bc anatomy is the number 1 thing a radiologist needs to know and a mass is the number 1 thing a radiologist doesn’t want to miss. Image
5/Now to T2!

T2 sequences are water sensitive sequences

What is pathologic water in the brain? Edema!

My attending once said, “Everything bad in this world is trying to turn you back into what you came from—water"

So T2 shows you edema—but this edema can be from many things Image
6/To review:

T1 is for anatomy and contrast

T2 (and FLAIR, which is a type of T2) is for water—which is bright on T2.

I remember this bc H20 has a 2 in it—T2 is for H20! Image
7/Next to diffusion or DWI.

Diffusion is primarily to detect stroke. Acute strokes are bright on diffusion.

But just as all that glitters is not gold, not all that is bright on DWI is an acute stroke. Image
8/This is bc all diffusion does is detect how difficult it is for water to move

Anything that makes the space around water crowded and difficult to move will be bright on diffusion imaging Image
9/So classically, it's from a stroke

When cells run out of ATP, the Na/K pump stops working & immediately water rushes in from osmotic pressure & cells swell

These swollen cells fill the interstitium & restrict the movement of water. This is why strokes are bright on DWI! Image
10/But other things can make it crowded and difficult for water to move

For example, tightly packed cells in aggressive tumors will also fill spaces & make it difficult for water to move—it's trapped between the tumor cells!

So highly cellular tumors are often bright on DWI Image
11/Here's an example

Here is a mass that is as bright as stroke on diffusion bc of its densely packed cells

On contrast images, we see it avidly enhance, as we would expect for a mass

On CT, the tumor is very dense bc of the densely packed cells. Image
12/Hematomas are also bright on DWI

In normal blood, water flows happy & free—but once the clotting cascade starts & fibrin & thrombin & whatever stuff I don’t remember as a radiologist clumps everything together, things get tight—water is trapped in the clot interstices! Image
13/Here's an example

The hemorrhage is bright on CT bc it is clotted, and thus more dense than the brain and CSF, which are closer in density to water.

For this same reason, the hemorrhage is bright on diffusion—bc the dense clot traps the water. Image
14/Pus is also bright on diffusion

As a radiologist I don’t often see pus, but as a mom, I sure do!

It is thick and gooey and you can just imagine how difficult it is for water to travel through that gelantinous blob of pus. Image
15/Here’s an example

There's a ring enhancing lesion w/a lot of edema on T2

Centrally, there is restricted diffusion, meaning that there is something gooey or thick or dense centrally

Bc this central stuff doesn’t enhance, we know it’s not a mass. This is pus in an abscess! Image
16/So to review:

T1 is for anatomy & contrast

T2 is for water & edema

DWI is for stroke

I remember DWI stands for Diagnose With Infarct! Image
17/Last but not least is gradient imaging

Gradient imaging is sensitive to metals

And what’s the most important metal in body? Iron!! Because iron is in blood!

So gradient is our blood sensitive sequence Image
18/Blood is black on gradient

I remember this bc gradient is for metal—and when I think of metal, I think of blacksmiths forging metal products

So BLACKsmith=metal is BLACK on gradient. Image
19/But other metals will be black too.

Notably, calcium, which is in our bones and in many other lesions

So remember, just all that glitters is not gold, not all that is black on gradient is blood—other metals are black too Image
20/So now you know the basic MRI sequences and what they are used for!

So hopefully now, the radiologist won’t sound like they are speaking a different language when they talk to you—they will just be nerdy and socially awkward when they do! Image

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More from @teachplaygrub

Oct 16
1/Time is brain!

So you don’t have time to struggle w/that stroke alert head CT.

If there’s no flow, what are the things you need to know??

Here’s a thread to help you with the five main CT findings in acute stroke. Image
2/CT in acute stroke has 2 main purposes—(1) exclude intracranial hemorrhage (a contraindication to thrombolysis) & (2) exclude other pathologies mimicking acute stroke.

However, that doesn’t mean you can’t see other findings that can help you diagnosis a stroke. Image
3/Infarct appearance depends on timing.

In first 12 hrs, the most common imaging finding is…a normal head CT.

However, in some, you see a hyperdense artery or basal ganglia obscuration.

Later in the acute period, you see loss of gray white differentiation & sulcal effacement Image
Read 13 tweets
Oct 14
1/They say form follows function!

Brain MRI anatomy is best understood in terms of both form & function.

Here’s a short thread to help you to remember important functional brain anatomy--so you truly can clinically correlate! Image
2/Let’s start at the top. At the vertex is the superior frontal gyrus. This is easy to remember, bc it’s at the top—and being at the top is superior. It’s like the superior king at the top of the vertex. Image
3/It is also easy to recognize on imaging. It looks like a big thumb pointing straight up out of the brain. I always look for that thumbs up when I am looking for the superior frontal gyrus (SFG) Image
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Oct 11
1/Radiologist not answering the phone?

Just want a quick read on that stat head CT?

Here's a little help on how to do it yourself w/a thread on how to read a head CT! Image
2/In bread & butter neuroimaging—CT is the bread—maybe a little bland, not super exciting—but necessary & you can get a lot of nutrition out of it

MRI is like the butter—everyone loves it, it makes everything better, & it packs a lot of calories. Today, we start w/the bread! Image
3/The most important thing to look for on a head CT is blood.

Blood is Bright on a head CT—both start w/B.

Blood is bright bc for all it’s Nobel prizes, all CT is is a density measurement—and blood is denser (thicker) than water & denser things are brighter on CT Image
Read 20 tweets
Oct 4
1/Want to TRI to learn something new about the TRIGEMINAL nerve?

If you’re only looking at the skullbase, you are missing a significant part of the trigeminal nucleus!

Let my help you TRI to up your game when it comes to TRIGEMINAL anatomy Image
2/We normally think of the trigeminal nerve nucleus in the brainstem.

But the trigeminal nucleus actually extends into the spine like a ponytail called the spinal trigeminal nucleus. Image
3/It extends down to around C2 to C4

You can remember this because cranial nerve 5 doesn’t extend below C5! Image
Read 11 tweets
Oct 2
1/Having trouble remembering what you should look for in vascular dementia on imaging?

Almost everyone worked up for dementia has infarcts. Which ones are important?

Here’s a thread on the key findings in vascular dementia Image
2/Vascular cognitive impairment, or its most serious form, vascular dementia, used to be called multi-infarct dementia.

It was thought dementia directly resulted from brain volume loss from infarcts, w/the thought that 50-100cc of infarcted related volume loss caused dementia Image
3/But that’s now outdated. We now know vascular dementia results from diverse pathologies that all share a common vascular origin.

It’s possible to lose little volume from infarct & still result in dementia.

So if infarcts are common—which contribute to vascular dementia? Image
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Sep 26
1/Ready to seize the day w/epilepsy imaging?

Everyone knows mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS)!

But did you know there are different KINDS of MTS??

Read on for this month's @theAJNR SCANtastic on what YOU need to know in the latest in epilepsy imaging!

ajnr.org/content/45/9/1…
Image
2/The name of the “hippocampus” comes from its shape on gross anatomy.

Early anatomists thought it looked like an upside down seahorse—w/its curved tail resembling the tail of a seahorse.

Hippocampus literally means seahorse. Image
3/In cross section, it has a spiral appearance, leading to its other name, Cornu Ammonis, translated Ammon’s Horn.

Ammon was an Egyptian god w/spiraling rams horns. Image
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