Publication | Closed Access
Intervertebral disk: normal age-related changes in MR signal intensity.
126
Citations
0
References
1990
Year
Intervertebral DiscOrthopaedic SurgeryIntervertebral DiskLumbar SpineSagittal ImageNeurologyNeuropathologyRadiologyHealth SciencesSpinal Cord InjuryMedical ImagingNeuroimagingLong Echo TimeLumbosacral RadiculopathyDegenerative SpineSpinal FusionNeuroscienceSignal IntensityMedicine
The effect of age on the signal intensity of normal lumbar intervertebral disks was studied. Twenty-seven cadavers ranging in age from newborn to 79 years were studied with use of a 1.5-T magnetic resonance (MR) imager within 48 hours of death. The signal intensity in the central area of the disk was measured on a sagittal image obtained with a long repetition time (TR) and a long echo time (TE) and correlated to the age. A significant correlation between the decrease in signal intensity and age was found, although signal intensity changed less than 6% in 80 years. The decrease in signal intensity is concomitant with decreases in water and glycosaminoglycans and increases in collagen in the disk.