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Black Blood MRI imaging of
HIV patient with brain vasculitis

FieldStrength MRI magazine

www.philips.com/fieldstrength

Black Blood imaging helped in suggesting the diagnosis
and choosing the treatment
In a patient with HIV and cardiovascular risk factors, MRI with Black Blood
imaging helped to diagnose brain vasculitis. The same MRI protocol was later
also used to noninvasively confirm treatment response.
Niloufar Sadeghi MD, PhD, is neuroradiologist at
Erasme Hospital in Brussels, Belgium since 2000.
She completed her PhD in 2010 and has been
recently nominated as professor.

Patient history

MRI examination with Black Blood imaging

A 56-year-old patient presented in the Emergency Room at
Erasme Hospital in Brussels, Belgium, with recurrent left leg
weakness that had been occurring over a period of 24 hours.
The patient was known to have been HIV infected for four years,
but was not treated for this infection. The patient had multiple
cardiovascular risk factors such as obesity, glucose intolerance,
arterial hypertension and hypercholesterolemia. The neurological
examination showed left leg hemiparesis.

After a conventional routine MR imaging examination, the
suspicion of vasculitis arose, therefore we performed an MRI
including Black Blood imaging in a separate session. The
dedicated ExamCard includes diffusion, FLAIR, MR angiography
using TOF, and 3D T1 MRA with bolus injection. This ExamCard
also includes Black Blood imaging before and after contrast.
This examination was performed on our Ingenia 3.0T. Black Blood
scan time 4:39 min, acquired voxel size 0.75 x 0.75 x 1.0 mm,
21 slices.

On FLAIR images we can see some nonspecific high signal abnormalities in frontal white matter bilaterally. On DWI we can see
acute ischemic lesions which appear with high signal intensity. Arrows show vessel wall enhancement which appears concentric
and homogeneous in different cerebral territories.

FLAIR

DWI

Black Blood imaging pre contrast

Black Blood imaging post contrast

Arrows show vessel wall enhancement which appears concentric and homogeneous in different cerebral territories.

Discussion of findings
On the routine MR sequences that we did, we could see acute
ischemic lesions. We see them very well on the diffusion images,
where acute ischemic lesions usually appear with high signal
intensity and restricted diffusion. However, the etiology of these
lesions cannot be derived from these images.
An area of restricted diffusion was seen in the anterior cerebral
artery territory and we concluded it was an ischemic lesion. On
MR angiography we can just see if there is stenosis or vessel
occlusion, but it does not provide us information on the etiology
of this kind of lesion.
So, we decided to perform Black Blood imaging. The presence
and the pattern of vessel wall enhancement on Black Blood
imaging, can help us to determine the etiology of the lesion.
Many studies have shown that Black Blood imaging can help
differentiate vasculitis from other causes of vasculopathy, such as
atherosclerosis, with a high specificity [1-3]. In an atherosclerotic
lesion, vessel wall thickening and enhancement are usually eccentric,
while in vasculitis the wall thickening and enhancement are usually
concentric, homogenous, and in a long portion of the vessel.
Furthermore, this imaging can also be used for the follow-up
of patients whenever their treatment is installed in order to
determine the efficacy of a particular treatment.
In this case the Black Blood imaging helped us to suggest the
diagnosis of HIV-related brain vasculitis.

Impact of Black Blood imaging for this
patient
With the multiple cardiovascular risk factors this patient
had, such as glucose intolerance, arterial hypertension and
hypocholesteremia, his lesions could be atherosclerotic lesions or
vasculitis, conditions which require different treatment. Especially
in this patient with HIV infection causing the vasculitis, treatment
of the two conditions is different.
The results of MRI with Black Blood imaging, helped to choose the
preferred treatment for this patient, which was based on antiviral
medication rather than an antiaggregant or anticoagulation
treatment which is usually given to patients with risk of ischemia
based on atherosclerotic lesions.
One month after beginning the antiviral treatment, the same
MRI examination was repeated and again 8 months after the
beginning of treatment. On follow-up images, we see the
enhancements have almost disappeared.
So in case of this patient, the MRI exam with Black Blood imaging
helped us to give the patient the appropriate treatment and also
allowed us to noninvasively confirm the treatment response.

Black Blood imaging after one month
After one month of treatment, post-contrast Black Blood images at the exact same levels as in the figure above show disappearance of
the vessel wall enhancements which were seen on the previous examination.

Black Blood imaging post contrast

The importance of Black Blood imaging

References

Black Blood imaging can help us to noninvasively visualize vessel
wall thickening and enhancement patterns that occur in vasculitis,
and help us distinguish it from atherosclerotic lesions. Imaging
techniques such as time-of-flight (TOF) MR angiography are not
very sensitive or specific for this kind of lesions. Other possible
diagnostic methods are intra-arterial angiography or brain
biopsies which are both invasive.

1. Swartz RH, Bhuta SS, Farb RI, Agid R, Willinsky RA, Terbrugge KG, et al. Intracranial
arterial wall imaging using high-resolution 3-tesla contrast-enhanced MRI.
Neurology. 2009 Feb 17;72(7):627–34.

2. Obusez EC, Hui F, Hajj-Ali RA, Cerejo R, Calabrese LH, Hammad T, et al. Highresolution MRI vessel wall imaging: spatial and temporal patterns of reversible
cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome and central nervous system vasculitis. AJNR Am
J Neuroradiol. 2014 Aug;35(8):1527–32.

Recommendations for using Black Blood
imaging

3. Mossa-Basha M, Hwang WD, De Havenon A, Hippe D, Balu N, Becker KJ, et al.

We do not perform this examination with Black Blood imaging
on all patients with ischemic lesions in the brain, because in
most patients the lesion origin is embolic or atherosclerotic. We
typically use it in young patients (less than 60 years old) or those
patients without cardiovascular risk factors. We find it important
to use Black Blood imaging in such cases, because treatment is
different for a patient with vasculitis.

Jun;46(6):1567–73.

Multicontrast high-resolution vessel wall magnetic resonance imaging and its value
in differentiating intracranial vasculopathic processes. Stroke J Cereb Circ. 2015

4.

Cheron J, Wyndham-Thomas C, Sadeghi N, Naeije G. Response of Human

Immunodeficiency Virus-Associated Cerebral Angiitis to the Combined Antiretroviral
Therapy. Front. Neurol., 13 March 2017, doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2017.00095
Results from case studies are not predictive of results in other cases. Results in
other cases may vary.

Black Blood imaging
Philips Black Blood imaging is 3D brain imaging with reduced
intraluminal blood signal1 over the complete imaging volume
in the brain.
It helps you to better differentiate intraluminal blood signal
from other signal, which can enhance diagnostic confidence.
The Black Blood sequence allows
• fast2, isotropic 3D imaging
• higher spatial resolution3
• reformatting in any plane without loss of resolution

1. Compared to our 3D T1W scan without MSE prepulse
2. Compared to our 2D double inversion recovery methods with same full brain
coverage
3. Compared to our 2D double inversion recovery methods with same brain
coverage and scan time

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