RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Time-of-flight intracranial MR venography: evaluation of the sequential oblique section technique. JF American Journal of Neuroradiology JO Am. J. Neuroradiol. FD American Society of Neuroradiology SP 1657 OP 1664 VO 15 IS 9 A1 J S Lewin A1 T J Masaryk A1 A S Smith A1 P M Ruggieri A1 J S Ross YR 1994 UL http://www.ajnr.org/content/15/9/1657.abstract AB PURPOSE To implement a time-of-flight MR angiographic technique using the oblique acquisition of thin gradient-echo sections to evaluate the intracranial venous system, and to assess the feasibility of application of this technique in a routine clinical setting. METHODS The MR angiographic technique consisted of a two-dimensional gradient-echo technique with sequential overlapped sections obtained with an oblique orientation, angled from the sagittal toward the coronal plane. Parameters were evaluated during 41 measurements in 21 healthy volunteers with the section orientation varying from direct sagittal to direct coronal, followed by 64 examinations in 53 patients with an angle of obliquity of 15 degrees to 20 degrees from the sagittal toward the coronal plane. Confirmation of MR venographic findings was through correlation with clinical data and imaging studies. RESULTS The volunteer data demonstrated optimal visibility of the smaller midline structures with an angle of obliquity of 15 degrees or greater. Patient examinations with this angle demonstrated sinus obstruction or thrombosis (n = 11), sinus compression (n = 2), and apparent sinus stenosis (n = 1). CONCLUSIONS Oblique-acquisition time-of-flight MR venography seems to provide a rapid, robust technique for intracranial venous examination and can be applied as a useful adjunct to parenchymal MR in the evaluation of suspected venoocclusive disease. This oblique technique demonstrated improved vessel contrast over direct sagittal acquisition, required significantly fewer sections and thus a shorter acquisition time than direct coronal acquisition, and was applied without difficulty in the vast majority of patients in the clinical setting.