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Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA) for the Diagnosis of Atherosclerosis

This study has been completed.
Study NCT00001841.   Last updated on March 3, 2008.   Information provided by National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)

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Descriptive Information Fields
Brief Title  Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA) for the Diagnosis of Atherosclerosis
Official Title  Contrast Enhanced Resonance Angiography (MRA) in the Diagnosis of Atherosclerotic Disease: A Pilot Technical Development Study
Brief Summary

Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA) is a method used to evaluate arteries and veins without the use of invasive catheters or x-rays (radiation). MRA technique has been continuously improving and has become more accurate at diagnosing problems of narrowing in blood vessels. However, MRA has a difficult time detecting narrowing in small blood vessels, limiting its use to large arteries.

The purpose of this study is to recruit patients diagnosed with or suspected of having, atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries) to participate in a series of new state-of-the-art diagnostic tests using MRA.

This study is a combined effort between the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS), and General Electric Medical Services and is supported a Cooperative Research Agreement is to (CRADA).

The goal of this study is to improve MRA to the point that it can reliably replace diagnostic x-ray catheter angiography in the evaluation of patients with atherosclerosis.

Detailed Description

Contrast Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA) is a developing technology that permits the non-invasive evaluation of arterial and venous structures without the need for x-ray based catheter angiography. While dramatic progress has been made in the last few years, there are still substantial limitations in the accuracy of MRA in judging stenoses and detecting small accessory vessels. The purpose of this study is to recruit patients with suspected or documented atherosclerotic disease for evaluation with state-of-the-art MRA using new surface coils, new pulse sequence designs, novel contrast administration strategies, and advanced image processing algorithms. This work represents a collaboration between NIH, USUHS and General Electric Medical Systems and is supported by a Cooperative Research Agreement (CRADA). The goal of this pilot study is to improve MRA to the point that it can reliably replace diagnostic x-ray catheter angiography in the evaluation of patients with atherosclerotic disease.

Study Phase
Study Type  Observational
Study Design 
Primary Outcome Measure 
Secondary Outcome Measure 
Condition  Atherosclerosis
Intervention 
MEDLINE PMIDs 8280977,   9494471,   9560485
Links
Recruitment Information Fields
Recruitment Status  Completed
Enrollment  100
Start Date  March 1999
Completion Date December 2004
Eligibility Criteria 

INCLUSION CRITERIA:

Patients must live in the Metropolitan Washington Area.

Patients must have suspected atherosclerotic disease based on clinical findings or documented by angiography or doppler ultrasound performed within 3 months of the MRA.

Patients must be willing to participate in the protocol.

Patients must be referred by a physician who is caring for the patient and to whom the results will be provided.

Patients must be clinically stable and be judged by their physician able to come to the Clinical Center to participate in the study.

Patients must have serum Creatinine value less than 3.0 mg/dl.

EXCLUSION CRITERIA:

Any contraindication for MRI including:

(a) pacemaker or other implanted electronic device; (b) cochlear implants; (c) metal in the eye; (d) embedded shrapnel fragments; (e) cerebral aneurysm clips; or (f) medical infusion pumps.

Allergy to Gadolinium based contrast media.

Unsatisfactory performance status as judged by the referring physician such that the patient could not tolerate an MRI scan. Examples of medical conditions that would not be accepted would include angina, dyspnea at rest, congestive heart failure, severe claudication (less than 1 flight of steps).

Intercurrent illness that requires treatment that would be jeopardized by the MRA scan.

Subjects requiring sedation for MRI studies.

Pregnant female.

Patients with severe back-pain who will be unable to tolerate supine positioning within the MRI scanner for the duration of the examination.

Gender Both
Ages
Accepts Healthy Volunteers No
Contacts ††
Location Countries  United States
Administrative Information Fields
NCT ID  NCT00001841
Organization ID 990061
Secondary IDs †† 99-CC-0061
Study Sponsor  National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Collaborators ††
Investigators 
Information Provided By National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Verification Date December 2004
First Received Date  November 3, 1999
Last Updated Date March 3, 2008

 †    Required WHO trial registration data element.
††   WHO trial registration data element that is required only if it exists.




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