Abstract

T1 relaxation time is a potential magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) biomarker for fibrosis and inflammation of the solid abdominal organs. However, normal T1 relaxation times of the solid abdominal organs have not been defined for children. The purpose of this study was to measure T1 relaxation times of the liver, pancreas and spleen in healthy children. This was an institutional review board-approved study of a convenience sample of prospectively recruited, healthy children ages 7 to 17years undergoing research abdominal MRI (1.5 or 3T) as part of a larger research study between February 2018 and October 2018. For the current study, T1 mapping was performed with a Modified Look-Locker sequence covering the upper abdomen. A single reviewer placed freehand regions of interest on the T1 parametric maps in the liver, pancreas and spleen, inclusive of as much parenchyma as possible. Student's t-tests and linear regression were used to compare T1 values by age and gender. Thirty-two participants were included (16 female:16 male; mean age: 12.2±3.1years; n=16 at 1.5T). Median T1 relaxation times (ms) per organ were liver: 581±64 (1.5T), 783±88 (3T); pancreas: 576±55 (1.5T), 730±30 (3T), and spleen: 1,172±71 (1.5T), 1,356±87 (3T). T1 values were not statistically significantly different between males and females. At both 1.5 and 3 T field strengths, linear regression showed no significant association between age and T1 values for the liver, pancreas and spleen. We report normal T1 relaxation times for the liver, pancreas and spleen at 1.5 and 3T in a cohort of healthy children.

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