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1.
J Magn Reson Imaging ; 2024 Jul 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38963154

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Lower back pain affects 75%-85% of people at some point in their lives. The detection of biochemical changes with sodium (23Na) MRI has potential to enable an earlier and more accurate diagnosis. PURPOSE: To measure 23Na relaxation times and apparent tissue sodium concentration (aTSC) in ex-vivo intervertebral discs (IVDs), and to investigate the relationship between aTSC and histological Thompson grade. STUDY TYPE: Ex-vivo. SPECIMEN: Thirty IVDs from the lumbar spines of 11 human body donors (4 female, 7 male, mean age 86 ± 8 years). FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE: 3 T; density-adapted 3D radial sequence (DA-3D-RAD). ASSESSMENT: IVD 23Na longitudinal (T1), short and long transverse (T2s* and T2l*) relaxation times and the proportion of the short transverse relaxation (ps) were calculated for one IVD per spine sample (11 IVDs). Furthermore, aTSCs were calculated for all IVDs. The degradation of the IVDs was assessed via histological Thompson grading. STATISTICAL TESTS: A Kendall Tau correlation (τ) test was performed between the aTSCs and the Thompson grades. The significance level was set to P < 0.05. RESULTS: Mean 23Na relaxation parameters of a subset of 11 IVDs were T1 = 9.8 ± 1.3 msec, T2s* = 0.7 ± 0.1 msec, T2l* = 7.3 ± 1.1 msec, and ps = 32.7 ± 4.0%. A total of 30 IVDs were examined, of which 3 had Thompson grade 1, 4 had grade 2, 5 had grade 3, 5 had grade 4, and 13 had grade 5. The aTSC decreased with increasing degradation, being 274.6 ± 18.9 mM for Thompson grade 1 and 190.5 ± 29.5 mM for Thompson grade 5. The correlation between whole IVD aTSC and Thompson grade was significant and strongly negative (τ = -0.56). DATA CONCLUSION: This study showed a significant correlation between aTSC and degenerative IVD changes. Consequently, aTSC has potential to be useful as an indicator of degenerative spinal changes. EVIDENCE LEVEL: 2 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 1.

2.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(13)2022 Jun 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35805925

RESUMEN

Based on in silico, in situ, and in vivo studies, this study aims to develop a new method for the quantitative chemical exchange saturation transfer (qCEST) technique considering multi-pool systems. To this end, we extended the state-of-the-art apparent exchange-dependent relaxation (AREX) method with a Lorentzian correction (LAREX). We then validated this new method with in situ and in vivo experiments on human intervertebral discs (IVDs) using the Kendall-Tau correlation coefficient. In the in silico experiments, we observed significant deviations of the AREX method as a function of the underlying exchange rate (kba) and fractional concentration (fb) compared to the ground truth due to the influence of other exchange pools. In comparison to AREX, the LAREX-based Ω-plot approach yielded a substantial improvement. In the subsequent in situ and in vivo experiments on human IVDs, no correlation to the histological reference standard or Pfirrmann classification could be found for the fb (in situ: τ = −0.17 p = 0.51; in vivo: τ = 0.13 p = 0.30) and kba (in situ: τ = 0.042 p = 0.87; in vivo: τ = −0.26 p = 0.04) of Glycosaminoglycan (GAG) with AREX. In contrast, the influence of interfering pools could be corrected by LAREX, and a moderate to strong correlation was observed for the fractional concentration of GAG for both in situ (τ = −0.71 p = 0.005) and in vivo (τ = −0.49 p < 0.001) experiments. The study presented here is the first to introduce a new qCEST method that enables qCEST imaging in systems with multiple proton pools.


Asunto(s)
Disco Intervertebral , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Glicosaminoglicanos , Humanos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Protones
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