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Article Abstract

Purpose: To investigate whether super-resolution deep learning reconstruction (SR-DLR) of MR myelography-aided evaluations of lumbar spinal stenosis.

Material And Methods: In this retrospective study, lumbar MR myelography of 40 patients (16 males and 24 females; mean age, 59.4 ± 31.8 years) were analyzed. Using the MR imaging data, MR myelography was separately reconstructed via SR-DLR, deep learning reconstruction (DLR), and conventional zero-filling interpolation (ZIP). Three radiologists, blinded to patient background data and MR reconstruction information, independently evaluated the image sets in terms of the following items: the numbers of levels affected by lumbar spinal stenosis; and cauda equina depiction, sharpness, noise, artifacts, and overall image quality.

Results: The median interobserver agreement in terms of the numbers of lumbar spinal stenosis levels were 0.819, 0.735, and 0.729 for SR-DLR, DLR, and ZIP images, respectively. The imaging quality of the cauda equina, and image sharpness, noise, and overall quality on SR-DLR images were significantly better than those on DLR and ZIP images, as rated by all readers (p < 0.001, Wilcoxon signed-rank test). No significant differences were observed for artifacts on SR-DLR against DLR and ZIP.

Conclusions: SR-DLR improved the image quality of lumbar MR myelographs compared to DLR and ZIP, and was associated with better interobserver agreement during assessment of lumbar spinal stenosis status.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12396975PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11604-025-01787-5DOI Listing

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