Background: MRI is the reference for the diagnosis of arterial cerebral ischemia, but its role in acute mesenteric ischemia (AMI) is poorly known.
Purpose: To assess MRI detection of early ischemic bowel lesions in a porcine model of arterial AMI.
Study type: Prospective/cohort.
Animal model: Porcine model of arterial AMI obtained by embolization of the superior mesenteric artery (seven pigs).
Field strength/sequence: A 5-T. T1 gradient-echo-weighted-imaging (WI), half-Fourier-acquisition-single-shot-turbo-spin-echo, T2 turbo-spin-echo, true-fast-imaging-with-steady-precession (True-FISP), diffusion-weighted-echo-planar (DWI).
Assessment: T1-WI, T2-WI, and DWI were performed before and continuously after embolization for 6 hours. The signal intensity (SI) of the ischemic bowel was assessed visually and quantitatively on all sequences. The apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) was assessed.
Statistical tests: Paired Student's t-test or Mann-Whitney U-test, significance at P < 0.05.
Results: One pig died from non-AMI-related causes. The remaining pigs underwent a median 5 h53 (range 1 h24-6 h01) of ischemia. Visually, the ischemic bowel showed signal hyperintensity on DWI-b800 after a median 85 (57-276) minutes compared to the nonischemic bowel. DWI-b800 SI significantly increased after 2 hours (+19%) and the ADC significant decrease within the first hour (-31%). The ischemic bowel was hyperintense on precontrast T1-WI after a median 87 (70-171) minutes with no significant quantitative changes over time (P = 0.46-0.93). The ischemic bowel was hyperintense on T2-WI in three pigs with a significant SI increase on True-FISP after 1 and 2 hours.
Data conclusion: Changes in SI and ADC can be seen early after the onset of arterial AMI with DWI. The value of T2-WI appears to be limited.
Evidence level: 1 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 2.
Keywords: mesenteric artery; mesenteric ischemia; superior; swine.
© 2022 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.