Abstract

The aim of our study was to determine the ability of the phase-contrast-cranial magnetic resonance venography (PC-CMRV) technique to detect cranial anatomy, variations, thrombosis, to reveal the deficits of the technique and to discuss the reasons for these deficits on a physics basis. Phase-contrast's detection rates of anatomic variations and physiological filling defects (FDs) were evaluated in 136 patients and compared with the time-of-flight technique magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and cadaveric studies. The dominance correlation between the three evaluated sinuses (transverse sinus [TS], sigmoid sinus, jugular vein) which originated from different embryological buds was statistically significant and the right vessel chain was dominant. PC is inadequate to show some vessels like inferior sagittal sinus (anatomically, this vessel is approximately present in 100% of the cases, but it was only visualised in 41.2% of the patients in PC-MRI). Visualisation of major veins was sufficient. PC-MRI created physiological FDs in 27.2% (72.3% middle, 10.3% inner, 17% outer part) of the patients. The FDs were concentrated in the middle part and not observed in the dominant sinus. The defects of visualisation are present due to the PC's technique. It can be misdiagnosed as agenesis or thrombosis. PC creates a high incidence of physiologic FDs in TS. The results are not reliable, especially if FDs are in the middle part or non-dominant side.

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