6 research outputs found

    Optimization and assessment of arterial spin labeled perfusion MRI in early-onset Alzheimer's disease

    No full text
    Le diagnostic de maladie d'Alzheimer (MA) chez les patients de moins de 65 ans ou early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) est souvent difficile car la prĂ©sentation clinique est frĂ©quemment atypique, dominĂ©e par des signes non amnĂ©siques. Les Ă©tudes antĂ©rieures sur les marqueurs de diagnostic prĂ©coce en imagerie se sont intĂ©ressĂ©es Ă  l'imagerie structurelle et fonctionnelle dans l'EOAD mais aucune Ă  la perfusion en IRM par la technique de marquage de spin ou arterial spin labeling (ASL). En effet, l'analyse de l'ASL demeure complexe, en particulier Ă  l'Ă©chelle individuelle, du fait du faible rapport signal sur bruit des cartographies de perfusion et de l'hĂ©tĂ©rogĂ©nĂ©itĂ© des zones atteintes Ă  la phase initiale de la maladie. Notre premier objectif Ă©tait technique et a consistĂ© Ă  optimiser l'interprĂ©tation des cartographies d'ASL grĂące Ă  la projection des anomalies de perfusion sur la surface du cortex extraite de l'acquisition morphologique T1 rĂ©alisĂ©e au cours du mĂȘme examen, permettant d'accĂ©der Ă  une reprĂ©sentation tridimensionnelle interactive des donnĂ©es perfusionnelles. Le traitement des cartographies intĂ©grait plusieurs Ă©tapes successives dont une correction des effets de volume partiel, une normalisation d'intensitĂ© spĂ©cifique et un lissage surfacique. Ce procĂ©dĂ© a Ă©tĂ© appliquĂ© sur les cartographies de 18 patients atteints d'EOAD avec une qualitĂ© de segmentation et de reprĂ©sentation des cartographies surfaciques obtenues jugĂ©es respectivement optimale et bonne dans 72 % des cas par deux lecteurs. Notre deuxiĂšme objectif Ă©tait clinique et avait pour but de caractĂ©riser les altĂ©rations perfusionnelles et mĂ©taboliques par ASL et 18fluorodĂ©soxuglucose-TEP (18F-FDG-TEP) sur un groupe de 37 patients atteints d'EOAD. Cette Ă©tude prĂ©liminaire Ă  montrĂ© : (i) un pattern anatomique pathologique commun au niveau des lobules pariĂ©taux infĂ©rieurs et des lobes temporaux ; (ii) des discordances entre les 2 techniques avec des lĂ©sions plus Ă©tendues en 18F-FDG-TEP et la dĂ©tection en ASL de zones hypoperfusĂ©es additionnelles au niveau des lobes frontaux non visibles en 18F-FDGTEP. Ces deux travaux suggĂšrent que l'ASL pourrait donc devenir une sĂ©quence complĂ©mentaire clef dans l'arsenal des techniques d'imagerie utiles Ă  un diagnostic prĂ©coce de l'EOAD et de la MA. Son utilisation en pratique clinique nĂ©cessite cependant une optimisation de sa reprĂ©sentation visuelle, et l'application corticale surfacique utilisĂ©e dans ce travail en reprĂ©sente une des voies potentielles.The diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) in patients under the age of 65 years, called early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD), remains a challenging issue due to the high incidence of atypical clinical presentations with non-memory symptoms. Although EAOD has been widely explored by structural and functional imaging, no previous study has examined the contribution of ASL in the assessment of cortical perfusion in this disease. Indeed, the analysis of ASL remains complex, especially at the individual level, due to the weak signal-to-noise ratio of the perfusion maps and the heterogeneity of pathological areas in the initial phase of the disease. Our first objective was technical and has consisted in optimizing the visual interpretation of ASL maps by the cortical surface-based projection of the perfusion alterations on the structural T1 sequence acquired during the same imaging protocol, providing a 3D interactive display of the perfusion data. Data processing included several successive steps, such as a partial volume effect correction, a specific intensity normalization and a surface-based smoothing process. It was applied on the perfusion maps of eighteen EOAD patients and the quality of segmentation and of cortical surface-based perfusion maps were scored as optimal in 72% in both cases by two readers. Our second objective was clinical and aimed to characterize the cerebral hypoperfusion and hypometabolism by ASL and 18F-FDG-PET in a group of 37 EOAD patients. Our preliminary study showed: (i) a similar pathological pattern located in the inferior parietal lobules and in the temporal cortex, (ii) discrepancies between the two modalities with the presence of more widespread hypometabolic regions detected by 18F-FDGPET and additionnai areas of alterations in the frontal lobes detected by ASL without apparent hypometabolism. Our studies suggest that ASL may become a useful complementary tool which, in combination with the existing structural and functional techniques, could offer improved efficiency in the difficult early detection of EOAD and AD. Its use in clinical practice, however, requires an optimization of its visual representation, and the cortical surface-based projection applied in this work represents one of the potential ways to this image quality improvement

    Optimisation et évaluation de la perfusion cérébrale par technique de marquage de spin dans la Maladie d'Alzheimer à début précoce

    No full text
    The diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) in patients under the age of 65 years, called early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD), remains a challenging issue due to the high incidence of atypical clinical presentations with non-memory symptoms. Although EAOD has been widely explored by structural and functional imaging, no previous study has examined the contribution of ASL in the assessment of cortical perfusion in this disease. Indeed, the analysis of ASL remains complex, especially at the individual level, due to the weak signal-to-noise ratio of the perfusion maps and the heterogeneity of pathological areas in the initial phase of the disease. Our first objective was technical and has consisted in optimizing the visual interpretation of ASL maps by the cortical surface-based projection of the perfusion alterations on the structural T1 sequence acquired during the same imaging protocol, providing a 3D interactive display of the perfusion data. Data processing included several successive steps, such as a partial volume effect correction, a specific intensity normalization and a surface-based smoothing process. It was applied on the perfusion maps of eighteen EOAD patients and the quality of segmentation and of cortical surface-based perfusion maps were scored as optimal in 72% in both cases by two readers. Our second objective was clinical and aimed to characterize the cerebral hypoperfusion and hypometabolism by ASL and 18F-FDG-PET in a group of 37 EOAD patients. Our preliminary study showed: (i) a similar pathological pattern located in the inferior parietal lobules and in the temporal cortex, (ii) discrepancies between the two modalities with the presence of more widespread hypometabolic regions detected by 18F-FDGPET and additionnai areas of alterations in the frontal lobes detected by ASL without apparent hypometabolism. Our studies suggest that ASL may become a useful complementary tool which, in combination with the existing structural and functional techniques, could offer improved efficiency in the difficult early detection of EOAD and AD. Its use in clinical practice, however, requires an optimization of its visual representation, and the cortical surface-based projection applied in this work represents one of the potential ways to this image quality improvement.Le diagnostic de maladie d'Alzheimer (MA) chez les patients de moins de 65 ans ou early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) est souvent difficile car la prĂ©sentation clinique est frĂ©quemment atypique, dominĂ©e par des signes non amnĂ©siques. Les Ă©tudes antĂ©rieures sur les marqueurs de diagnostic prĂ©coce en imagerie se sont intĂ©ressĂ©es Ă  l'imagerie structurelle et fonctionnelle dans l'EOAD mais aucune Ă  la perfusion en IRM par la technique de marquage de spin ou arterial spin labeling (ASL). En effet, l'analyse de l'ASL demeure complexe, en particulier Ă  l'Ă©chelle individuelle, du fait du faible rapport signal sur bruit des cartographies de perfusion et de l'hĂ©tĂ©rogĂ©nĂ©itĂ© des zones atteintes Ă  la phase initiale de la maladie. Notre premier objectif Ă©tait technique et a consistĂ© Ă  optimiser l'interprĂ©tation des cartographies d'ASL grĂące Ă  la projection des anomalies de perfusion sur la surface du cortex extraite de l'acquisition morphologique T1 rĂ©alisĂ©e au cours du mĂȘme examen, permettant d'accĂ©der Ă  une reprĂ©sentation tridimensionnelle interactive des donnĂ©es perfusionnelles. Le traitement des cartographies intĂ©grait plusieurs Ă©tapes successives dont une correction des effets de volume partiel, une normalisation d'intensitĂ© spĂ©cifique et un lissage surfacique. Ce procĂ©dĂ© a Ă©tĂ© appliquĂ© sur les cartographies de 18 patients atteints d'EOAD avec une qualitĂ© de segmentation et de reprĂ©sentation des cartographies surfaciques obtenues jugĂ©es respectivement optimale et bonne dans 72 % des cas par deux lecteurs. Notre deuxiĂšme objectif Ă©tait clinique et avait pour but de caractĂ©riser les altĂ©rations perfusionnelles et mĂ©taboliques par ASL et 18fluorodĂ©soxuglucose-TEP (18F-FDG-TEP) sur un groupe de 37 patients atteints d'EOAD. Cette Ă©tude prĂ©liminaire Ă  montrĂ© : (i) un pattern anatomique pathologique commun au niveau des lobules pariĂ©taux infĂ©rieurs et des lobes temporaux ; (ii) des discordances entre les 2 techniques avec des lĂ©sions plus Ă©tendues en 18F-FDG-TEP et la dĂ©tection en ASL de zones hypoperfusĂ©es additionnelles au niveau des lobes frontaux non visibles en 18F-FDGTEP. Ces deux travaux suggĂšrent que l'ASL pourrait donc devenir une sĂ©quence complĂ©mentaire clef dans l'arsenal des techniques d'imagerie utiles Ă  un diagnostic prĂ©coce de l'EOAD et de la MA. Son utilisation en pratique clinique nĂ©cessite cependant une optimisation de sa reprĂ©sentation visuelle, et l'application corticale surfacique utilisĂ©e dans ce travail en reprĂ©sente une des voies potentielles

    A roadmap towards pollution prevention and sustainable development of Gadolinium

    No full text
    International audienceSeveral studies have shown the evidence of GBCAs’environmentalpollution and Gd3+toxicity both in aquatic organisms and humans. This short communication provides a roadmap using recent quan-titative data on GBCAs’consumption, medical use and waste, towardsenvironmental pollution mitigation and sustainable developmen
    corecore