44 research outputs found
Cardiac and Respiratory Influences on Intracranial and Neck Venous Flow, Estimated Using Real-Time Phase-Contrast MRI
The study of brain venous drainage has gained attention due to its hypothesized link with various neurological conditions. Intracranial and neck venous flow rate may be estimated using cardiac-gated cine phase-contrast (PC)-MRI. Although previous studies showed that breathing influences the neck's venous flow, this aspect could not be studied using the conventional segmented PC-MRI since it reconstructs a single cardiac cycle. The advent of real-time PC-MRI has overcome these limitations. Using this technique, we measured the internal jugular veins and superior sagittal sinus flow rates in a group of 16 healthy subjects (12 females, median age of 23 years). Comparing forced-breathing and free-breathing, the average flow rate decreased and the respiratory modulation increased. The flow rate decrement may be due to a vasoreactive response to deep breathing. The respiratory modulation increment is due to the thoracic pump's greater effect during forced breathing compared to free breathing. These results showed that the breathing mode influences the average blood flow and its pulsations. Since effective drainage is fundamental for brain health, rehabilitative studies might use the current setup to investigate if respiratory exercises positively affect clinical variables and venous drainage
Mapping tissue microstructure across the human brain on a clinical scanner with soma and neurite density image metrics
Soma and neurite density image (SANDI) is an advanced diffusion magnetic resonance imaging biophysical signal model devised to probe in vivo microstructural information in the gray matter (GM). This model requires acquisitions that include b values that are at least six times higher than those used in clinical practice. Such high b values are required to disentangle the signal contribution of water diffusing in soma from that diffusing in neurites and extracellular space, while keeping the diffusion time as short as possible to minimize potential bias due to water exchange. These requirements have limited the use of SANDI only to preclinical or cuttingâedge human scanners. Here, we investigate the potential impact of neglecting water exchange in the SANDI model and present a 10âmin acquisition protocol that enables to characterize both GM and white matter (WM) on 3 T scanners. We implemented analytical simulations to (i) evaluate the stability of the fitting of SANDI parameters when diminishing the number of shells; (ii) estimate the bias due to potential exchange between neurites and extracellular space in such reduced acquisition scheme, comparing it with the bias due to experimental noise. Then, we demonstrated the feasibility and assessed the repeatability and reproducibility of our approach by computing microstructural metrics of SANDI with AMICO toolbox and other stateâofâtheâart models on five healthy subjects. Finally, we applied our protocol to five multiple sclerosis patients. Results suggest that SANDI is a practical method to characterize WM and GM tissues in vivo on performant clinical scanners
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Measuring respiratory and cardiac influences on blood and cerebrospinal fluid flow with real-time MRI
Background. A link between various pathological conditions and blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow alterations has been suggested by numerous studies.1 The blood and CSF dynamics are influenced by many factors, such as posture,2 heart beating, and thoracic pressure changes during respiration.2,3 The blood/CSF can be estimated using phase-contrast (PC) â magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). However, the clinical cardiac-gated cine PC-MRI requires several heartbeats to form the time-resolved flow images covering the entire cardiac cycle, not allowing to assess beat-by-beat variability differences and respiratory-driven flow changes. To overcome these limitations, we recently used a real-time (RT)-PC prototype for the study of blood and CSF flow rate modulations, showing low-frequency oscillations (Mayer waves).4 With the same MRI technique, in the current study we focused on assessing the cardiac and respiratory modulations on the blood and CSF flow rates, and the effects of different respiration modes.
Methods. Thirty healthy volunteers (21 females, median age=26 years old, age range= 19-57 years old) were examined with a 3 T scanner. RT-PC sequences (Figure 1) allowed for a quantification of the flow rates of internal carotid arteries (ICAs), internal jugular veins (IJVs), and CSF at the first cervical level. The superior sagittal sinus (SSS) was also studied in 16 subjects.5 The flow rates were estimated with a temporal resolution of 58.5 ms for the blood, and 94 ms for the CSF. Each RT-PC lasted 60 seconds and was repeated three times: while the subject breathed with free (F) breathing, at a constant rate with a normal (PN) or forced (PD) strength. The systolic, diastolic and average flow rates and their power spectral densities were computed. High and very-high frequency peaks were identified on the spectra. Frequencies associated to the identified peaks were compared to the respiratory and cardiac frequencies estimated by a thoracic band and a pulse oximeter. The area under the spectra, normalized by the flow rate variance, was computed in the respiratory and cardiac frequency ranges (0.5 Hz-wide ranges, centered on the cardiac or breathing frequency peaks, respectively).
Results. The frequencies associated with the spectral peaks were not significantly different compared to the respiratory and cardiac frequencies, for all regions and breathing modes. The average blood flow rate and the diastolic CSF peak progressively decreased from F to PN to PD breathing, the flow rate variance remained stable, and only the ICAs cross-sectional area decreased. The respiratory modulation increased with PD breathing compared with F and PN, while the cardiac modulations were less predominant for all the structures of interest.
Conclusions. Using the RT-PC sequence we showed that the blood and CSF flow rates were modulated at the respiratory and cardiac frequencies. The observed reduced blood flow rate during forced breathing in the arteries and consequently in the extra and intracranial veins are suggestive of compensatory vasoconstriction in response to decreased CO2 blood concentration. Breathing modulation of flow rates was observed both in the extracranial and intracranial compartments, and it was greater during forced breathing than free breathing, due to the greater thoracic pump effect on the flow rates
Endovascular repair using parallel grafts to treat a suprarenal pancreatitis-related abdominal aortic pseudoaneurysm
: Arterial pseudoaneurysms represent an uncommon complication of acute pancreatic inflammation or chronic pancreatitis. We describe a contained rupture of a suprarenal abdominal aortic pseudoaneurysm. An aorto-uni-iliac stent-graft was adopted as the aortic main body and was combined with two chimneys and two periscope stents for celiac/superior mesenteric artery and renal arteries, respectively. The procedure was complicated by the entrapment of the celiac sheath into the barbs of the aortic stent-graft and the attempts to remove the sheath resulted in an upward migration of the stent-grafts. A bail-out endovascular procedure was used to reline the stent-grafts and the pseudoaneurysmal sac was embolized with coils
Endovascular Bailout Repair After Intraprocedural Thrombosis of a Bifurcated Unimodular Stent-graft During Aorto-iliac Revascularization in a Patient with Sars CoV-2 Infection
: To describe a case of endovascular bailout strategy during stent-graft thrombotic complication in an endovascular procedure for complex TASC II D aortoiliac lesion. A 77-year-old patient was admitted at our institution with bilateral lower limb rest pain due to aortoiliac obstructive disease in a previous aortobifemoral bypass grafting with an asymptomatic Sars-CoV-2 infection. We planned an anatomic reconstruction of the aortoiliac segment with an unimodular bifurcated stent-graft. During the procedure, we observed a preocclusive thrombosis of the aortic portion requiring endovascular thrombectomy with vacuum assisted system followed by a successfully kissing-stent endolining. The post-operative period was uneventful and patient was discharged on the 14th post-operative day. Endovascular thrombectomy may be a helpful strategy during thrombotic complication of complex reconstructions of obstructive aortoiliac disease avoiding surgical conversion to laparotomy