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MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING OF THE INITIAL ACTIVE STAGE OF EQUINE LAMINITIS AT 4.7 T
Authors:Jason B. Arble  John S. Mattoon  Wm. Tod Drost  Steven E. Weisbrode  Peter A. Wassenaar  Xueliang Pan  Robert J. Hunt  James K. Belknap
Affiliation:Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210,;Department of Veterinary Biosciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210,;Department of Radiology, College of Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210,;Department of Statistics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210 and;Hagyard-Davidson-McGee, Lexington, KY
Abstract:Equine laminitis is a severely debilitating disease. There is a poor understanding of the underlying pathophysiology, and traditional imaging modalities have limited diagnostic capacity. High field strength magnetic resonance (MR) imaging allows direct visualization of the laminae, which other modalities do not. This would prove useful both in assessment of clinical patients and in further investigation into the pathophysiology of the disease. The objective of this study was to characterize the anatomic changes within the equine foot associated with the initial active stage of laminitis. Images obtained using a 4.7 T magnet were compared with digital radiographs using histologic diagnosis as the reference standard. Objective measurements and subjective evaluation for both modalities were evaluated for the ability to predict the histologic diagnosis in horses with clinical signs of laminitis as well as in clinically normal horses and horses that were in a population at risk for developing laminitis. Signal intensity and architectural changes within the corium and laminae were readily seen at 4.7 T, and there was a strong association with the histologic diagnosis of active laminitis. Measurements obtained with MR imaging were more sensitive and specific predictors of laminitis than those obtained radiographically. Subjective evaluation with MR imaging was more sensitive than with radiography and should become more specific with greater understanding of normal anatomy.
Keywords:equine    laminitis    MRI
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