MR angiography (MRA) is used to assess the lumen of the arteries for example in:
It can be performed with or without contrast.
No contrast is injected in these studies. Instead, the flow of blood in a particular direction is imaged creating an arterial map. At 3T these produce very good images of the vessels. They are also useful for assessing retrograde flow e.g. arterialisation of veins in arteriovenous fistulas.
However, they are susceptible to metal artefact and slow flow will result in no signal being acquired, mimicking occlusion.
This is performed after an injection of gadolinium which fills the vessels highlighting the lumen. It also means that a post-contrast image of the brain can be acquired.
The most common use for this is for follow up of aneurysm treatment as the signal dropout caused by coil and clip metal artifact can make it look like the vessels are completely occluded; the gadolinium fills the vessels and overcomes some of this effect. It also overcomes the slow flow effect caused by TOF MRA.
Notice how the contrast-enhanced MRA reveals much smaller arteries at the periphery of the study.
MR venography (MRV) is used to assess the size and patency of the intracranial veins. Usually, this is only accurate for the dural venous sinuses and the larger cortical veins. MRV is not sensitive enough for accurate assessment of the smaller veins and venous plexuses. Clinical situations in which this is useful includes:
MRVs can be performed without or with contrast.
These are performed without contrast. They use physics principles to form an image based on the direction of flow. Both methods are susceptible to metal artifact. Venous blood flows in multiple directions intracranially and if you don’t sample in a particular direction you may underestimate the venous flow. Because of this there will also be some arterial contamination.
Contrast is injected and the images acquired at a slight delay when the contrast fills the venous system. This technique overcomes the artifacts created by metal and hemorrhage and the unexpected direction of flow.