Unsuppressed fat in the right anterior diaphragmatic region on fat‐suppressed T2‐weighted fast spin‐echo MR images

Abstract
The authors retrospectively evaluated magnetic resonance Images of the abdomen obtained In 52 consecutive patients. All cases included fast spinecho (FSE) T2‐weighted images acquired with a frequency‐selective fat saturation technique. All imaging was performed with a 1.5‐T unit. In 42 patients (81%), fat was not suppressed in the right anterior diaphragmatic region on the T2‐welghted FSE images with fat suppression. In 11 (26%) of these 42 patients, subcutaneous fat adjacent to the unsuppressed anterior diaphragmatic fat was well suppressed. Hence, the fat In the diaphragmatic region mimicked fluid or peritoneal implants. The cause of the artifact appears to be the juxtaposition of liver, fat, and lung parenchymal air within a small anatomic space, creating a localized inhomogeneity of the magnetic field and susceptibility effects. Radiologists should be aware of this phenomenon to prevent confusion of an artifact with fluid or neoplasms.