28 research outputs found
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Reduction in Cerebral Blood Flow in Areas Appearing as White Matter Hyperintensities on Magnetic Resonance Imaging
The purpose of this study was to examine cerebral blood flow (CBF) as measured by arterial spin labeling (ASL) in tissue classified as white matter hyperintensities (WMH), normal appearing white matter, and grey matter. Seventeen healthy older adults received structural and ASL MRI. Cerebral blood flow was derived for three tissue types: WMH, normal appearing white matter, and grey matter. Cerebral blood flow was lower in WMH areas relative to normal appearing white matter, which in turn, was lower than grey matter. Regions with consistently lower CBF across individuals were more likely to appear as WMH. Results are consistent with an emerging literature linking diminished regional perfusion with the risk of developing WMH
Recommended from our members
Reduction in Cerebral Blood Flow in Areas Appearing as White Matter Hyperintensities on Magnetic Resonance Imaging
The purpose of this study was to examine cerebral blood flow (CBF) as measured by arterial spin labeling (ASL) in tissue classified as white matter hyperintensities (WMH), normal appearing white matter, and grey matter. Seventeen healthy older adults received structural and ASL MRI. Cerebral blood flow was derived for three tissue types: WMH, normal appearing white matter, and grey matter. Cerebral blood flow was lower in WMH areas relative to normal appearing white matter, which in turn, was lower than grey matter. Regions with consistently lower CBF across individuals were more likely to appear as WMH. Results are consistent with an emerging literature linking diminished regional perfusion with the risk of developing WMH
Mapping brain function using a 30-day interval between baseline and activation: a novel arterial spin labeling fMRI approach
By comparing hemodynamic signals acquired immediately before and during activation, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is well suited for mapping acute changes in brain function. However, it remains unclear whether fMRI can map functional changes over longer periods. Here, we address this issue by empirically testing the feasibility of arterial spin labeling (ASL) fMRI to detect changes in cerebral blood flow (CBF) with baseline and task separated by 1 month. To increase the sensitivity of the method, we applied an algorithm that yielded flow density (CBFd) images that were independent of tissue content. To increase the accuracy, we developed a technique that generated arterial transit time at each voxel, independently. Results showed that activation changes in CBFd during the same session were statistically the same as across 30 days. The activation CBFd on day-30 was 34% (motor) and 25% (visual) higher than the respective baselines of 83 and 107âmL/100âg/min obtained on day-1. Furthermore, the signal-to-noise ratio of the CBFd measurement was 2.1 and 2.9 times higher than that of the conventional CBF for within-subject and across-subjects comparisons, respectively (n=9 healthy young subjects). Taken together, these results indicate that CBFd measure could be better suited than net CBF to map long-term changes in brain function
A variable flip angle-based method for reducing blurring in 3D GRASE ASL
Arterial Spin Labeling (ASL) is an MRI technique to measure cerebral blood flow directly and noninvasively, and thus provides a more direct quantitative correlate of neural activity than blood-oxygen-level-dependent fMRI. A 3D gradient and spin-echo (GRASE) sequence is capable of enhancing signal-to-noise ratio, and has been shown to be a very useful readout module for ASL sequences. Nonetheless, the introduction of significant blurring in its single-shot version, due to T2 decay along the partition dimension, compromises the achievable spatial resolution, limiting the potential of this technique for whole-brain coverage. To address this issue, a method for reducing blurring based on a variable flip angle (VFA) scheme is proposed in this study for 3D GRASE ASL perfusion. Numerical simulations show that the proposed method is capable of reducing the blurring significantly compared to the standard constant flip angle approach; this result was further confirmed using in vivo data. The proposed VFA method should therefore be of significance to 3D GRASE ASL fMRI studies, since it is able to reduce blurring without sacrificing temporal resolution