Osteosarcoma MRI
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Mohammadmain Rezazadehsaatlou[2].
Osteosarcoma Microchapters |
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Osteosarcoma MRI On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Osteosarcoma MRI |
Overview
On MRI, osteosarcoma is characterized by intermediate intensity of soft tissue and low signal intensity of ossified components on T1. High signal intensity of soft tissue and low signal intensity of ossified components on T2. Considerable contrast enhancement of solid components on T1 contrast.
MRI
- MRI is proving essential in accurate local staging and assessment for limb sparing resection, particularly for evaluation of intraosseous tumor extension and soft-tissue involvement.
- Assessment of the growth plate is also essential as up to 75-88% of metaphyseal tumors do cross the growth plate into the epiphysis.
- MRI is used to:
- Show how far a bone tumor has grown inside a bone.
- Show how much a bone tumor has grown outside the bone.
- Observe if a tumor has grown into blood vessels, nerves, bone marrow or other nearby tissues or structures.
- Determine if the tumor has developed in one or more sites within the same bone (skip metastases).
- Plan for possible surgery.
On MRI, signal characteristics of osteosarcoma include:[1]
- T1:
- Soft tissue, non-mineralized component: intermediate signal intensity.
- Mineralized/ossified components: low signal intensity.
- Peri-tumoral edema: intermediate signal intensity.
- Scattered regions of hemorrhage will have variable signal.
- T2:
- T1 C+ (Gd):
- Solid components show considerable enhancement.
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Coronal T1
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Coronal T1 C+ fat sat
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Axial T2
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Axial T2 fat sat
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Axial T1
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Axial T1 C+ fat sat
- The following table illustrates the findings on MRI for the subtypes of osteosarcoma:[1]
Subtype | MRI findings |
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References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Osteosarcoma. Dr Amir Rezaee ◉ and Dr Frank Gaillard ◉ et al. Radiopaedia.org 2015. http://radiopaedia.org/articles/osteosarcoma