The MRI pelvis protocol encompasses a set of MRI sequences for the routine assessment of the pelvis.
Note: This article aims to frame a general concept of an MRI protocol for the assessment of the pelvis in the setting of suspected musculoskeletal pathology. Protocol specifics will vary depending on MRI scanner type, specific hardware and software, radiologist and perhaps referrer preference, patient factors e.g. implants, specific indications and time constraints.
On this page:
Indications
Typical indications include the following: different causes of groin pain, bilateral hip pain or pain in the buttock and the following:
bilateral osteonecrosis of the hip
proximal hamstring tendinopathy
assessment for metastatic disease
lumbosacral plexus imaging
1.5 vs 3 tesla
Musculoskeletal examinations are generally done on both 1.5 and 3 tesla and this is also the case for the pelvis. They profit from the improved spatial and contrast resolution of 3 tesla. Postoperative examinations in patients with metallic implants, however, should be done on 1.5 tesla with metal artifact reduction sequence.
Patient positioning
An MRI of the pelvis is conducted with the patient in the supine position.
Technical parameters
Coil
Multi-phased array coils are recommended.
anterior surface coil
Scan geometry
in-plane spatial resolution: ≤0.7 x 0.7 mm
field of view (FOV): 320-360
slice thickness: ≤4 mm
Planning
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coronal images:
angulation: strictly coronal to the body axis
volume: skin to skin
slice thickness: ≤4 mm
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axial images:
angulation: strictly axial to the body axis
volume: from the iliac crest to the lesser trochanter
slice thickness: ≤4 mm
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sagittal images*:
angulation: strictly sagittal to the body axis
volume: depends on the clinical question
slice thickness: ≤4 mm
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coronal oblique images*:
angulation: along the axis of the symphysis
volume: includes the whole symphysis
slice thickness: ≤3 mm
Sequences
The mainstay in musculoskeletal imaging are water-sensitive sequences, this can be achieved with STIR, T2-weighted fat-saturated images or with intermediate-weighted images.
At least one T1-weighted sequence should be included to ease the assessment and interpretation of bone marrow and/or soft tissue lesions.
Standard sequences
Frequently an MRI of the pelvis does not require any contrast media. A typical MRI of the pelvis might look like as follows:
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T2-weighted or intermediate-weighted (fat-saturated)
purpose: bone and/or soft-tissue characterisation, detailed anatomy, including ligament and tendon anatomy as well as an adductor and rectus abdominis muscle insertions
technique: T2 FS fast spin echo / IM fast spin echo
planes: coronal, axial, coronal oblique* with decreased FOV
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T1-weighted
purpose: bone and/or soft-tissue characterisation, the depiction of inguinal hernias
technique: T1 fast spin echo
planes: coronal, axial* (option e.g. in case of lumbosacral plexus imaging or inguinal hernias), sagittal* (option in tumours)
Optional sequences
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T2-weighted
purpose: bone and soft tissue characterisation - tumours
technique: T2 fast spin echo
planes: axial * (option in tumours)
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3D imaging
purpose: for lumbosacral plexus imaging
technique: 3D GRE
acquisition plane: coronal
Some indications might benefit from the application of contrast media as e.g. inflammatory conditions or tumours.
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T1-weighted C+ (fat-saturated)
purpose: inflammatory conditions, tumours
technique: T1 fast spin echo
planes: coronal, axial, sagittal* depending on the pathology
(*) indicates optional planes
Practical points
the protocol can and should be tailored to the specific indication or clinical question
a typical native protocol will consist of 4-5 sequences
an alternative to the T2-weighted or intermediate-weighted (fat-saturated) image axial stack would be a T2-weighted Dixon variant, which includes a fluid-sensitive fat-saturated and a non-fat-saturated image stack