Whole body diffusion-weighted imaging is a functional magnetic resonance imaging technique that characterizes tissue by probing changes in water diffusion secondary to differences in the tissue microstructure. These changes in water diffusion result in differences in signal intensity on diffusion-weighted images that are quantified with the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC). In malignant lesions, the extravascular extracellular space (EES) will be diminished, due to the increased number of cells. This will restrict water diffusion, identified by increased signal intensity (SI) on native diffusion-weighted images and low ADC. Contrary, in tissue with low cellularity, like benign lesions and treatment induced necrosis, the EES will be enlarged due to the lower density of cells, or in case of necrosis, the complete absence of cellular organization. This will facilitate water diffusion, leading to absent SI on native diffusion-weighted images and high ADC. The purpose of this study is to image anatomy and lymph nodes in healthy volunteers with whole body diffusion-weighted imaging. This way maps of normal anatomy can be created on the whole body diffusion-weighted images which can be used as a reference in further studies with patients scanned with the same whole body diffusion-weighted imaging scan protocol. A group of 30 healthy volunteers will receive a whole body diffusion-weighted imaging scan on a 3 Tesla T-MRI system. A total scan session will take about 30 minutes. Contrast administration is not required and patients will not be exposed to radiation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
30
MRI scan without contrast administration and without radiation exposure
University Hospitals Leuven
Leuven, Vlaams-Brabant, Belgium
normal aspect of human anatomy on WB-DWI images/ technique optimization
assessment after all the scans of the healthy volunteers are collected
Time frame: up to 12 months
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