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Cerebrovascular reactivity measurements using simultaneous

Authors :
Moss Y, Zhao
Audrey P, Fan
David Yen-Ting, Chen
Magdalena J, Sokolska
Jia, Guo
Yosuke, Ishii
David D, Shin
Mohammad Mehdi, Khalighi
Dawn, Holley
Kim, Halbert
Andrea, Otte
Brittney, Williams
Taghi, Rostami
Jun-Hyung, Park
Bin, Shen
Greg, Zaharchuk
Source :
NeuroImage
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) reflects the capacity of the brain to meet changing physiological demands and can predict the risk of cerebrovascular diseases. CVR can be obtained by measuring the change in cerebral blood flow (CBF) during a brain stress test where CBF is altered by a vasodilator such as acetazolamide. Although the gold standard to quantify CBF is PET imaging, the procedure is invasive and inaccessible to most patients. Arterial spin labeling (ASL) is a non-invasive and quantitative MRI method to measure CBF, and a consensus guideline has been published for the clinical application of ASL. Despite single post labeling delay (PLD) pseudo-continuous ASL (PCASL) being the recommended ASL technique for CBF quantification, it is sensitive to variations to the arterial transit time (ATT) and labeling efficiency induced by the vasodilator in CVR studies. Multi-PLD ASL controls for the changes in ATT, and velocity selective ASL is in theory insensitive to both ATT and labeling efficiency. Here we investigate CVR using simultaneous 15O-water PET and ASL MRI data from 19 healthy subjects. CVR and CBF measured by the ASL techniques were compared using PET as the reference technique. The impacts of blood T1 and labeling efficiency on ASL were assessed using individual measurements of hematocrit and flow velocity data of the carotid and vertebral arteries measured using phase-contrast MRI. We found that multi-PLD PCASL is the ASL technique most consistent with PET for CVR quantification (group mean CVR of the whole brain = 42 ± 19% and 40 ± 18% respectively). Single-PLD ASL underestimated the CVR of the whole brain significantly by 15 ± 10% compared with PET (p

Details

ISSN :
10959572
Volume :
233
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NeuroImage
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........126e17937e05539997e5a30efd6a0c2f