RESUMO
A key function of sleep is to provide a regular period of reduced brain metabolism, which is critical for maintenance of healthy brain function. The purpose of this work was to quantify the sleep-stage-dependent changes in brain energetics in terms of cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO2 ) as a function of sleep stage using quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with concurrent electroencephalography (EEG) during sleep in the scanner. Twenty-two young and older subjects with regular sleep hygiene and Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) in the normal range were recruited for the study. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) and venous oxygen saturation (SvO2 ) were obtained simultaneously at 3 Tesla field strength and 2.7-s temporal resolution during an 80-min time series using OxFlow, an in-house developed imaging sequence. The method yields whole-brain CMRO2 in absolute physiologic units via Fick's Principle. Nineteen subjects yielded evaluable data free of subject motion artifacts. Among these subjects, 10 achieved slow-wave (N3) sleep, 16 achieved N2 sleep, and 19 achieved N1 sleep while undergoing the MRI protocol during scanning. Mean CMRO2 was 98 ± 7(µmol min-1 )/100 g awake, declining progressively toward deepest sleep stage: 94 ± 10.8 (N1), 91 ± 11.4 (N2), and 76 ± 9.0 µmol min-1 /100 g (N3), with each level differing significantly from the wake state. The technology described is able to quantify cerebral oxygen metabolism in absolute physiologic units along with non-REM sleep stage, indicating brain oxygen consumption to be closely associated with depth of sleep, with deeper sleep stages exhibiting progressively lower CMRO2 levels.
Assuntos
Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Fases do Sono , Humanos , Sono , Oxigênio , Espectroscopia de Ressonância MagnéticaRESUMO
PURPOSE: Renal metabolic rate of oxygen (rMRO2 ) is a potentially important biomarker of kidney function. The key parameters for rMRO2 quantification include blood flow rate (BFR) and venous oxygen saturation (SvO2 ) in a draining vessel. Previous approaches to quantify renal metabolism have focused on the single organ. Here, both kidneys are considered as one unit to quantify bilateral rMRO2 . A pulse sequence to facilitate bilateral rMRO2 quantification is introduced. METHODS: To quantify bilateral rMRO2 , measurements of BFR and SvO2 are made along the inferior vena cava (IVC) at suprarenal and infrarenal locations. From the continuity equation, these four parameters can be related to derive an expression for bilateral rMRO2 . The recently reported K-MOTIVE pulse sequence was implemented at four locations: left kidney, right kidney, suprarenal IVC, and infrarenal IVC. A dual-band variant of K-MOTIVE (db-K-MOTIVE) was developed by incorporating simultaneous-multi-slice imaging principles. The sequence simultaneously measures BFR and SvO2 at suprarenal and infrarenal locations in a single pass of 21 s, yielding bilateral rMRO2 . RESULTS: SvO2 and BFR are higher in suprarenal versus infrarenal IVC, and the renal veins are highly oxygenated (SvO2 >90%). Bilateral rMRO2 quantified in 10 healthy subjects (8 M, 30 ± 8 y) was found to be 291 ± 247 and 349 ± 300 (µmolO2 /min)/100 g, derived from K-MOTIVE and db-K-MOTIVE, respectively. In comparison, total rMRO2 from combining left and right was 329 ± 273 (µmolO2 /min)/100 g. CONCLUSION: The present work demonstrates that bilateral rMRO2 quantification is feasible with fair reproducibility and physiological plausibility. The indirect method is a promising approach to compute bilateral rMRO2 when individual rMRO2 quantification is difficult.
Assuntos
Oximetria , Oxigênio , Humanos , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Oximetria/métodos , Veia Cava Inferior/diagnóstico por imagem , Rim/diagnóstico por imagem , Rim/metabolismoRESUMO
During the early stages of diabetes, kidney oxygen utilization increases. The mismatch between oxygen demand and supply contributes to tissue hypoxia, a key driver of chronic kidney disease. Thus, whole-organ renal metabolic rate of oxygen (rMRO2 ) is a potentially valuable biomarker of kidney function. The key parameters required to determine rMRO2 include the renal blood flow rate (RBF) in the feeding artery and oxygen saturation in the draining renal vein (SvO2 ). However, there is currently no noninvasive method to quantify rMRO2 in absolute physiologic units. Here, a new MRI pulse sequence, Kidney Metabolism of Oxygen via T2 and Interleaved Velocity Encoding (K-MOTIVE), is described, along with evaluation of its performance in the human kidney in vivo. K-MOTIVE interleaves a phase-contrast module before a background-suppressed T2 -prepared balanced steady-state-free-precession (bSSFP) readout to measure RBF and SvO2 in a single breath-hold period of 22 s, yielding rMRO2 via Fick's principle. Variants of K-MOTIVE to evaluate alternative bSSFP readout strategies were studied. Kidney mass was manually determined from multislice gradient recalled echo images. Healthy subjects were recruited to quantify rMRO2 of the left kidney at 3-T field strength (N = 15). Assessments of repeat reproducibility and comparisons with individual measurements of RBF and SvO2 were performed, and the method's sensitivity was evaluated with a high-protein meal challenge (N = 8). K-MOTIVE yielded the following metabolic parameters: T2 = 157 ± 19 ms; SvO2 = 92% ± 6%; RBF = 400 ± 110 mL/min; and rMRO2 = 114 ± 117(µmol O2 /min)/100 g tissue. Reproducibility studies of T2 and RBF (parameters directly measured by K-MOTIVE) resulted in coefficients of variation less than 10% and intraclass correlation coefficients more than 0.75. The high-protein meal elicited an increase in rMRO2 , which was corroborated by serum biomarkers. The K-MOTIVE sequence measures SvO2 and RBF, the parameters necessary to quantify whole-organ rMRO2 , in a single breath-hold. The present work demonstrates that rMRO2 quantification is feasible with good reproducibility. rMRO2 is a potentially valuable physiological biomarker.
Assuntos
Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Oxigênio , Humanos , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Rim/metabolismo , BiomarcadoresRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: Neurovascular compliance (NVC) is the change in the brain's arterial tree blood volume, ΔV, divided by the change in intra-vascular blood pressure, ΔP, during the cardiac cycle. The primary aim of this work was to evaluate the performance of MRI measurement of NVC obtained from time-resolved measurements of internal carotid artery (ICA) and vertebral artery (VA) flow rates. A secondary aim was to explore whether NVC could be estimated from common carotid (CCA) flow in conjunction with prior knowledge of mean ICA and VA fractional flow rates, given the small cross-section of ICA and VA in some populations, in particular small children. METHODS: ΔV was quantified from the blood flow rate measured at the ICA and VA for actual NVC derivation. It was further estimated from individually measured CCA flow rate and mean flow fractions ICA/CCA and VA/CCA (which could alternatively be obtained from literature data), to yield estimated NVC. Time-resolved blood flow rate in CCA, ICA and VA was obtained via retrospectively-gated 2D PC-MRI at 1.5 T in healthy subjects (N = 16, 8 women, mean age 36 ± 13 years). ΔP was determined via a brachial pressure measurement. RESULTS: Actual and estimated mean NVC were 27 ± 15 and 38 ± 15 µL/mmHg, respectively, and the two measurements were strongly correlated (r = 0.80; p = 0.0002) with test-retest intra-class correlation coefficients of 0.964 and 0.899. CONCLUSION: Both methods yielded excellent retest precision. In spite of a large bias, actual and estimated NVC were strongly correlated.
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Artérias Carótidas , Artéria Carótida Interna , Criança , Humanos , Feminino , Adulto Jovem , Adulto , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Artéria Carótida Interna/diagnóstico por imagem , Artéria Carótida Interna/fisiologia , Estudos Retrospectivos , Artérias Carótidas/diagnóstico por imagem , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Artéria Vertebral/diagnóstico por imagem , Artéria Vertebral/fisiologia , Velocidade do Fluxo SanguíneoRESUMO
OBJECTIVES: CT is the clinical standard for surgical planning of craniofacial abnormalities in pediatric patients. This study evaluated three MRI cranial bone imaging techniques for their strengths and limitations as a radiation-free alternative to CT. METHODS: Ten healthy adults were scanned at 3 T with three MRI sequences: dual-radiofrequency and dual-echo ultrashort echo time sequence (DURANDE), zero echo time (ZTE), and gradient-echo (GRE). DURANDE bright-bone images were generated by exploiting bone signal intensity dependence on RF pulse duration and echo time, while ZTE bright-bone images were obtained via logarithmic inversion. Three skull segmentations were derived, and the overlap of the binary masks was quantified using dice similarity coefficient. Craniometric distances were measured, and their agreement was quantified. RESULTS: There was good overlap of the three masks and excellent agreement among craniometric distances. DURANDE and ZTE showed superior air-bone contrast (i.e., sinuses) and soft-tissue suppression compared to GRE. DISCUSSIONS: ZTE has low levels of acoustic noise, however, ZTE images had lower contrast near facial bones (e.g., zygomatic) and require effective bias-field correction to separate bone from air and soft-tissue. DURANDE utilizes a dual-echo subtraction post-processing approach to yield bone-specific images, but the sequence is not currently manufacturer-supported and requires scanner-specific gradient-delay corrections.
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Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Crânio , Adulto , Humanos , Criança , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Crânio/diagnóstico por imagem , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodosRESUMO
Background Preclinical studies have suggested that solid-state MRI markers of cortical bone porosity, morphologic structure, mineralization, and osteoid density are useful measures of bone health. Purpose To explore whether MRI markers of cortical bone porosity, morphologic structure, mineralization, and osteoid density are affected in postmenopausal osteoporosis (OP) and to examine associations between MRI markers and bone mineral density (BMD) in postmenopausal women. Materials and Methods In this single-center study, postmenopausal women were prospectively recruited from January 2019 to October 2020 into two groups: participants with OP who had not undergone treatment, defined as having any dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) T-score of -2.5 or less, and age-matched control participants without OP (hereafter, non-OP). Participants underwent MRI in the midtibia, along with DXA in the hip and spine, and peripheral quantitative CT in the midtibia. Specifically, MRI measures of cortical bone porosity (pore water and total water), osteoid density (bound water [BW]), morphologic structure (cortical bone thickness), and mineralization (phosphorous [P] density [31P] and 31P-to-BW concentration ratio) were quantified at 3.0 T. MRI measures were compared between OP and non-OP groups and correlations with BMD were assessed. Results Fifteen participants with OP (mean age, 63 years ± 5 [SD]) and 19 participants without OP (mean age, 65 years ± 6) were evaluated. The OP group had elevated pore water (11.6 mol/L vs 9.5 mol/L; P = .007) and total water densities (21.2 mol/L vs 19.7 mol/L; P = .03), and had lower cortical bone thickness (4.8 mm vs 5.6 mm; P < .001) and 31P density (6.4 mol/L vs 7.5 mol/L; P = .01) than the non-OP group, respectively, although there was no evidence of a difference in BW or 31P-to-BW concentration ratio. Pore and total water densities were inversely associated with DXA and peripheral quantitative CT BMD (P < .001), whereas cortical bone thickness and 31P density were positively associated with DXA and peripheral quantitative CT BMD (P = .01). BW, 31P density, and 31P-to-BW concentration ratio were positively associated with DXA (P < .05), but not with peripheral quantitative CT. Conclusion Solid-state MRI of cortical bone was able to help detect potential impairments in parameters reflecting porosity, morphologic structure, and mineralization in postmenopausal osteoporosis. © RSNA, 2023 Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Bae in this issue.
Assuntos
Osteoporose Pós-Menopausa , Feminino , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Idoso , Osteoporose Pós-Menopausa/diagnóstico por imagem , Porosidade , Densidade Óssea , Absorciometria de Fóton , Osso Cortical/diagnóstico por imagem , Água , Imageamento por Ressonância MagnéticaRESUMO
Quantitative BOLD (qBOLD) MRI permits noninvasive evaluation of hemodynamic and metabolic states of the brain by quantifying parametric maps of deoxygenated blood volume (DBV) and hemoglobin oxygen saturation level of venous blood (Yv), and along with a measurement of cerebral blood flow (CBF), the cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO2). The method, thus should have potential to provide important information on many neurological disorders as well as normal cerebral physiology. One major challenge in qBOLD is to separate deoxyhemoglobin's contribution to R2' from other sources modulating the voxel signal, for instance, R2, R2' from non-heme iron (R'2,nh), and macroscopic magnetic field variations. Further, even with successful separation of the several confounders, it is still challenging to extract DBV and Yv from the heme-originated R2' because of limited sensitivity of the qBOLD model. These issues, which have not been fully addressed in currently practiced qBOLD methods, have so far precluded 3D whole-brain implementation of qBOLD. Thus, the purpose of this work was to develop a new 3D MRI oximetry technique that enables robust qBOLD parameter mapping across the entire brain. To achieve this goal, we employed a rapid, R2'-sensitive, steady-state 3D pulse sequence (termed 'AUSFIDE') for data acquisition, and implemented a prior-constrained qBOLD processing pipeline that exploits a plurality of preliminary parameters obtained via AUSFIDE, along with additionally measured cerebral venous blood volume. Numerical simulations and in vivo studies at 3 T were performed to evaluate the performance of the proposed, constrained qBOLD mapping in comparison to the parent qBOLD method. Measured parameters (Yv, DBV, R'2,nh, nonblood magnetic susceptibility) in ten healthy subjects demonstrate the expected contrast across brain territories, while yielding group-averages of 64.0 ± 2.3 % and 62.2 ± 3.1 % for Yv and 2.8 ± 0.5 % and 1.8 ± 0.4 % for DBV in cortical gray and white matter, respectively. Given the Yv measurements, additionally quantified CBF in seven of the ten study subjects enabled whole-brain 3D CMRO2 mapping, yielding group averages of 134.2 ± 21.1 and 79.4 ± 12.6 µmol/100 g/min for cortical gray and white matter, in good agreement with literature values. The results suggest feasibility of the proposed method as a practical and reliable means for measuring neurometabolic parameters over an extended brain coverage.
Assuntos
Mapeamento Encefálico/métodos , Volume Sanguíneo Cerebral/fisiologia , Circulação Cerebrovascular/fisiologia , Imageamento Tridimensional , Oxigênio/metabolismo , Adulto , Feminino , Hemoglobinas/metabolismo , Humanos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , MasculinoRESUMO
Supervised exercise is a common therapeutic intervention for patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD), however, the mechanism underlying the improvement in claudication symptomatology is not completely understood. The hypothesis that exercise improves microvascular blood flow is herein tested via temporally resolved magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measurement of blood flow and oxygenation dynamics during reactive hyperemia in the leg with the lower ankle-brachial index. One hundred and forty-eight subjects with PAD were prospectively assigned to standard medical care or 3 mo of supervised exercise therapy. Before and after the intervention period, subjects performed a graded treadmill walking test, and MRI data were collected with Perfusion, Intravascular Venous Oxygen saturation, and T2* (PIVOT), a method that simultaneously quantifies microvascular perfusion, as well as relative oxygenation changes in skeletal muscle and venous oxygen saturation in a large draining vein. The 3-mo exercise intervention was associated with an improvement in peak walking time (64% greater in those randomized to the exercise group at follow-up, P < 0.001). Significant differences were not observed in the MRI measures between the subjects randomized to exercise therapy versus standard medical care based on an intention-to-treat analysis. However, the peak postischemia perfusion averaged across the leg between baseline and follow-up visits increased by 10% (P = 0.021) in participants that were adherent to the exercise protocol (completed >80% of prescribed exercise visits). In this cohort of adherent exercisers, there was no difference in the time to peak perfusion or oxygenation metrics, suggesting that there was no improvement in microvascular function nor changes in tissue metabolism in response to the 3-mo exercise intervention.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Supervised exercise interventions can improve symptomatology in patients with peripheral artery disease, but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Here, MRI was used to evaluate perfusion, relative tissue oxygenation, and venous oxygen saturation in response to cuff-induced ischemia. Reactive hyperemia responses were measured before and after 3 mo of randomized supervised exercise therapy or standard medical care. Those participants who were adherent to the exercise regimen had a significant improvement in peak perfusion.
Assuntos
Hiperemia , Doença Arterial Periférica , Teste de Esforço , Terapia por Exercício , Humanos , Hiperemia/diagnóstico por imagem , Claudicação Intermitente/diagnóstico por imagem , Claudicação Intermitente/terapia , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Músculo Esquelético/irrigação sanguínea , Doença Arterial Periférica/diagnóstico por imagem , Doença Arterial Periférica/terapia , Fluxo Sanguíneo Regional , CaminhadaRESUMO
PURPOSE: Cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO2 ) is an important biomarker of brain function. Key physiological parameters required to quantify CMRO2 include blood flow rate in the feeding arteries and venous oxygen saturation (SvO2 ) in the draining vein. Here, a pulse sequence, metabolism of oxygen via T2 and interleaved velocity encoding (MOTIVE), was developed to measure both parameters simultaneously and enable CMRO2 quantification in a single pass. METHODS: The MOTIVE sequence interleaves a phase-contrast module between a nonselective saturation and a background-suppressed T2 -prepared EPI readout (BGS-EPI) to measure T2 of blood water protons and cerebral blood flow in 20 s or less. The MOTIVE and standalone BGS-EPI sequences were compared against TRUST ("T2 relaxation under spin tagging") in the brain in healthy subjects (N = 24). Variants of MOTIVE to enhance resolution or shorten scan time were explored. Intrasession and intersession reproducibility studies were performed. RESULTS: MOTIVE experiments yielded an average SvO2 of 61 ± 6% in the superior sagittal sinus of the brain and an average cerebral blood flow of 56 ± 10 ml/min/100 g. The bias in SvO2 of MOTIVE and BGS-EPI to TRUST was +2 ± 4% and +1 ± 3%, respectively. The bias in cerebral blood flow of MOTIVE to Cartesian phase-contrast reference was +1 ± 6 ml/min/100 g. CONCLUSIONS: The MOTIVE sequence is an advance over existing T2 -based oximetric methods. It does not require a control image and simultaneously measures SvO2 and flow velocity. The measurements agree well with TRUST and reference phase-contrast sequences. This noninvasive technique enables CMRO2 quantification in under 20 s and is reproducible for in vivo applications.
Assuntos
Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Oxigênio , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Circulação Cerebrovascular , Humanos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Oximetria/métodos , Consumo de Oxigênio/fisiologia , Reprodutibilidade dos TestesRESUMO
PURPOSE: Magnetic susceptibility (Δχ) alterations have shown association with myocardial infarction (MI) iron deposition, yet there remains limited understanding of the relationship between relaxation rates and susceptibility or the effect of magnetic field strength. Hence, Δχ and R2∗ in MI were compared at 3T and 7T. METHODS: Subacute MI was induced by coronary artery ligation in male Yorkshire swine. 3D multiecho gradient echo imaging was performed at 1-week postinfarction at 3T and 7T. Quantitative susceptibility mapping images were reconstructed using a morphology-enabled dipole inversion. R2∗ maps and quantitative susceptibility mapping were generated to assess the relationship between R2∗ , Δχ, and field strength. Infarct histopathology was investigated. RESULTS: Magnetic susceptibility was not significantly different across field strengths (7T: 126.8 ± 41.7 ppb; 3T: 110.2 ± 21.0 ppb, P = NS), unlike R2∗ (7T: 247.0 ± 14.8 Hz; 3T: 106.1 ± 6.5 Hz, P < .001). Additionally, infarct Δχ and R2∗ were significantly higher than remote myocardium. Magnetic susceptibility at 7T versus 3T had a significant association (ß = 1.02, R2 = 0.82, P < .001), as did R2∗ (ß = 2.35, R2 = 0.98, P < .001). Infarct pathophysiology and iron deposition were detected through histology and compared with imaging findings. CONCLUSION: R2∗ showed dependence and Δχ showed independence of field strength. Histology validated the presence of iron and supported imaging findings.
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Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Traumatismo por Reperfusão Miocárdica , Animais , Ferro , Fenômenos Magnéticos , Magnetismo , Masculino , Traumatismo por Reperfusão Miocárdica/diagnóstico por imagem , SuínosRESUMO
This study was designed to investigate the acute effects of nonnicotinized e-cigarette (e-cig) aerosol inhalation in nonsmokers both in terms of blood-based markers of inflammation and oxidative stress and evaluate their association with hemodynamic-metabolic MRI parameters quantifying peripheral vascular reactivity, cerebrovascular reactivity, and aortic stiffness. Thirty-one healthy nonsmokers were subjected to two blood draws and two identical MRI protocols, each one before and after a standardized e-cig vaping session. After vaping, the serum levels of C-reactive protein, soluble intercellular adhesion molecule, and the danger signal machinery high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) and its downstream effector and the NLR family pyrin domain containing 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome (as monitored by its adaptor protein ASC) increased significantly relative to the respective baseline (prevaping) values. Moreover, nitric oxide metabolites and reactive oxygen species production decreased and increased, respectively. These observations were paralleled by impaired peripheral vascular reactivity (with reduced flow-mediated dilation and attenuated hyperemic response after a cuff-occlusion test) and metabolic alterations expressed by decreased venous oxygen saturation, postvaping. The current results suggest propagation of inflammation signaling via activation of the danger signaling axis (HMGB1-NLRP3). The findings indicate that a single episode of vaping has adverse impacts on vascular inflammation and function.NEW & NOTWORTHY Endothelial cell signaling and blood biomarkers were found to correlate with functional vascular changes in a single episode e-cigarettes inhalation in healthy adults. This is indicative of the potential of e-cigarettes (even when inhaled acutely) to lead of vascular dysfunction.
Assuntos
Vasos Sanguíneos/metabolismo , Vasos Sanguíneos/fisiopatologia , Vapor do Cigarro Eletrônico/efeitos adversos , Sistemas Eletrônicos de Liberação de Nicotina , Mediadores da Inflamação/sangue , não Fumantes , Estresse Oxidativo , Vaping/efeitos adversos , Vasodilatação , Adulto , Aerossóis , Biomarcadores/sangue , Vasos Sanguíneos/diagnóstico por imagem , Linhagem Celular , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Oxigênio/sangue , Adulto JovemRESUMO
PURPOSE: Measuring the transverse-relaxation rate R2' provides valuable information in quantitative evaluation of tissue microstructure, for example, in terms of oxygenation levels. Here, we propose an alternating unbalanced SSFP pulse sequence for rapid whole-brain 3D R2' mapping. METHODS: Unlike currently practiced, spin echo-based R2' measurement techniques, the proposed method alternates between SSFP-FID and SSFP-ECHO modes for rapid 3D encoding of transverse relaxation rates expressed as R2 + R2' and R2-R2' . Z-shimming gradients embedded into multi-echo trains of each SSFP module are designed to achieve relative immunity to large-scale magnetic-field variations (ΔB0 ). Appropriate models for the temporal evolution of the two groups of SSFP signals were constructed with ΔB0 -induced modulations accounted for, leading to ΔB0 -corrected estimation of R2 , R2' , and R2∗ (= R2 + R2' ). Additionally, relative magnetic susceptibility (Δχ) maps were obtained by quantitative susceptibility mapping of the phase data. Numerical simulations were performed to optimize scan parameters, followed by in vivo studies at 3 T in 7 healthy subjects. Measured parameters were evaluated in six brain regions, and subjected to interparameter correlation analysis. RESULTS: The resultant maps of R2' and additionally derived R2 , R2∗ , and Δχ all demonstrated the expected contrast across brain territories (eg, deep brain structures versus cortex), with the measured values in good agreement with previous reports. Furthermore, regression analyses yielded strong linear relationships for the transverse relaxation parameters ( R2' , R2 , and R2∗ ) against Δχ. CONCLUSION: Results suggest feasibility of the proposed method as a practical and reliable means for measuring R2' , R2 , R2∗ , and Δχ across the entire brain.
Assuntos
Encéfalo , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Mapeamento Encefálico , Humanos , Campos Magnéticos , MagnetismoRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Abnormal maternal vascular function during pregnancy stemming from systemic endothelial dysfunction (EDF) has a central role in the pathophysiology of preeclampsia (PE). PURPOSE: To utilize quantitative MRI to investigate changes in physiological measures of vascular reactivity during normal pregnancy, and to explore EDF associated with preeclampsia. STUDY TYPE: Prospective. POPULATION: Healthy pregnant (HP) (n = 14, mean GA = 26 ± 7 weeks) and nonpregnant women (NP; n = 14); newly postpartum (PP <48 hours) women with severe PE (PP-PE; n = 4) and normotensive pregnancy (PP-HP; n = 5). FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE: 1.5T/3T. RF spoiled multiecho gradient-recalled echo, 1D phase-contrast MRI, time-of-flight. ASSESSMENT: The micro- and macrovascular function (vasodilatory capacity of arterioles and conduit arteries, respectively) of the femoral vascular bed was evaluated with MRI-based venous oximetry, arterial velocimetry, and luminal flow-mediated dilation quantification, during cuff-induced reactive hyperemia. Aortic arch pulse-wave velocity (aPWV) was quantified to assess arterial stiffness using an ungated 1D technique. STATISTICAL TESTS: Two-tailed unpaired t-tests were performed to address our two, primary a priori comparisons, HP vs. NP, and PP-PE vs. PP-HP. Given the pilot nature of this study, adjustments for multiple comparisons were not performed. RESULTS: In HP, microvascular function was attenuated compared to NP by a significant increase in the washout time (10 ± 2 vs. 8 ± 2 sec; P < 0.05) and reduced upslope (2.1 ± 0.5 vs. 3.2 ± 0.8%HbO2 /s; P < 0.05), time of forward flow (28 ± 5 vs. 33 ± 6 sec, P < 0.05), and hyperemic index (11 ± 3 vs. 16 ± 4 cm/s2 ; P < 0.05), but luminal flow-mediated dilatation (FMDL )was comparable between HP and NP. PP-PE exhibited significant vascular dysfunction compared to PP-HP, as evidenced by differences in upslope (2.2 ± 0.6 vs. 1.3 ± 0.2%HbO2 /s, P < 0.05), overshoot (16 ± 5 vs. 7 ± 3%HbO2 , P < 0.05), time of forward flow (28 ± 6 vs. 15 ± 7 s, P < 0.05), and aPWV (7 ± 1 vs. 8 ± 1 m/s, P < 0.05). DATA CONCLUSION: Attenuated vascular reactivity during pregnancy suggests that the systemic vasodilatory state partially depletes nitric oxide bioavailability. Preliminary data support the potential for MRI to identify vascular dysfunction in vivo that underlies PE. Level of Evidence 2 Technical Efficacy Stage 1 J. MAGN. RESON. IMAGING 2021;53:447-455.
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Análise de Onda de Pulso , Rigidez Vascular , Feminino , Humanos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Projetos Piloto , Gravidez , Estudos ProspectivosRESUMO
Proposed as a safer alternative to smoking, the use of electronic cigarettes has not proven to be innocuous. With numerous deaths, there is an increasing degree of public interest in understanding the symptoms, imaging appearances, causes of, and treatment of electronic cigarette or vaping product use-associated lung injury (EVALI). Patients with EVALI typically have a nonspecific clinical presentation characterized by a combination of respiratory, gastrointestinal, and constitutional symptoms. EVALI is a diagnosis of exclusion; the patient must elicit a history of recent vaping within 90 days, other etiologies must be eliminated, and chest imaging findings must be abnormal. Chest CT findings in EVALI most commonly show a pattern of acute lung injury on the spectrum of organizing pneumonia and diffuse alveolar damage. The pathologic pattern found depends on when in the evolution of the disease process the biopsy sample is taken. Other less common forms of lung injury, including acute eosinophilic pneumonia and diffuse alveolar hemorrhage, have also been reported. Radiologists and pathologists help play an important role in the evaluation of patients suspected of having EVALI. Accurate and rapid identification may decrease morbidity and mortality by allowing for aggressive clinical management and glucocorticoid administration, which have been shown to decrease the severity of lung injury in some patients. In this review, the authors summarize the current state of the art for the imaging and pathologic findings of this disorder and outline a few of the major questions that remain to be answered.
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Lesão Pulmonar , Vaping/efeitos adversos , Sistemas Eletrônicos de Liberação de Nicotina , Humanos , Lesão Pulmonar/diagnóstico por imagem , Lesão Pulmonar/etiologia , Lesão Pulmonar/patologia , Lesão Pulmonar/fisiopatologia , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios XRESUMO
PURPOSE: Venous cerebral blood volume (CBVv ) is a major contributor to BOLD contrast, and therefore is an important parameter for understanding the underlying mechanism. Here, we propose a velocity-selective venous spin labeling (VS-VSL)-prepared 3D turbo spin echo pulse sequence for whole-brain baseline CBVv mapping. METHODS: Unlike previous CBVv measurement techniques that exploit the interrelationship between BOLD signals and CBVv , in the proposed VS-VSL technique both arterial blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) signals were suppressed before the VS pulse train for exclusive labeling of venous blood, while a single-slab 3D turbo spin echo readout was used because of its relative immunity to magnetic field variations. Furthermore, two approximations were made to the VS-VSL signal model for simplified derivation of CBVv . In vivo studies were performed at 3T field strength in 8 healthy subjects. The performance of the proposed VS-VSL method in baseline CBVv estimation was first evaluated in comparison to the existing, hyperoxia-based method. Then, data were also acquired using VS-VSL under hypercapnic and hyperoxic gas breathing challenges for further validation of the technique. RESULTS: The proposed technique yielded physiologically plausible baseline CBVv values, and when compared with the hyperoxia-based method, showed no statistical difference. Furthermore, data acquired using VS-VSL yielded average CBVv of 2.89%/1.78%, 3.71%/2.29%, and 2.88%/1.76% for baseline, hypercapnia, and hyperoxia, respectively, in gray/white matter regions. As expected, hyperoxia had negligible effect (P > .8), whereas hypercapnia demonstrated vasodilation (P << .01). CONCLUSION: Upon further validation of the quantification model, the method is expected to have merit for 3D CBVv measurements across the entire brain.
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Volume Sanguíneo Cerebral , Hiperóxia , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Mapeamento Encefálico , Circulação Cerebrovascular , Humanos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Oxigênio , Marcadores de SpinRESUMO
PURPOSE: Myelin water is commonly characterized by its short proton T2 relaxation time, suggesting strong association with the polar head groups of the bilayer constituents. Deuterium NMR of water in ordered structures exhibits splittings as a result of quadrupolar interactions that are observable using the double-quantum filter. The purpose of the current study was to identify and characterize the water populations. METHODS: The 2 H double-quantum-filtered spectroscopic experiments were conducted at 62 MHz (9.4 T) on a sample of reconstituted myelin from ovine spinal cord after exchange of native water with D2 O. RESULTS: Signals passing the double-quantum filter were attributed to 2 water pools: 1 consisting of a doublet of 650-Hz splitting, and a second unsplit signal. Similar signals were observed in the sciatic and optic nerves and in the spinal cord. Further, data suggest that diffusion of water molecules in these 2 pools (Dapp ≤ 5 × 10-7 cm2 /s) is either hindered or restricted. An estimate of exchange lifetime of 10-15 ms between water pertaining to the single peak and that of the split peaks suggests exchange occurs in a slow-intermediate rate regime. Further distinction between the 2 pools was obtained from T1 measurements. Deuterons belonging to the doublet resonance were found to have short T1 , estimated to be on the order of 10-20 ms, whereas those corresponding to the single peak were close to that of bulk D2 O. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that myelin extract water consists of 2 hindered populations with distinct degrees of anisotropic motion that can be studied by 2 H double-quantum-filtered NMR.
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Bainha de Mielina , Água , Animais , Deutério , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , OvinosRESUMO
PURPOSE: The impact of gradient imperfections on UTE images and UTE image-derived bone water quantification was investigated at 3 T field strength. METHODS: The effects of simple gradient time delays and eddy currents on UTE images, as well as the effects of gradient error corrections, were studied with simulation and phantom experiments. The k-space trajectory was mapped with a 2D sequence with phase encoding on both spatial axes by measuring the phase of the signal in small time increments during ramp-up of the read gradient. In vivo 3D UTE images were reconstructed with and without gradient error compensation to determine the bias in bone water quantification. Finally, imaging was performed on 2 equally configured Siemens TIM Trio systems (Siemens Medical Solutions, Erlangen, Germany) to investigate the impact of such gradient imperfections on inter-scanner measurement bias. RESULTS: Compared to values derived from UTE images with full gradient error compensation, total bone water was found to deviate substantially with no (up to 17%) or partial (delay-only) compensation (up to 10.8%). Bound water, obtained with inversion recovery-prepared UTE, was somewhat less susceptible to gradient errors (up to 2.2% for both correction strategies). Inter-scanner comparison indicated a statistically significant bias between measurements from the 2 MR systems for both total and bound water, which either vanished or was substantially reduced following gradient error correction. CONCLUSION: Gradient imperfections impose spatially dependent artifacts on UTE images, which compromise not only bone water quantification accuracy but also inter-scanner measurement agreement if left uncompensated.
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Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Água , Alemanha , Imageamento Tridimensional , Imagens de FantasmasRESUMO
The effects of e-cigarette (e-cig) aerosol inhalation by nonsmokers have not been examined to date. The present study was designed to evaluate the acute response to aerosol inhalation of non-nicotinized e-cigarettes in terms of oxidative stress and indices of endothelial activation in human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells (HPMVEC). Ten smoking-naïve healthy subjects (mean age ± SD = 28.7 ± 5.5 yr) were subjected to an e-cig challenge, following which their serum was monitored for markers of inflammation [C-reactive protein (CRP) and soluble intercellular adhesion molecule (sICAM)] and nitric oxide metabolites (NOx). The oxidative stress and inflammation burden of the circulating serum on the vascular network was also assessed by measuring reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and induction of ICAM-1 expression on HPMVEC. Our results show that serum indices of oxidative stress and inflammation increased significantly (P < 0.05 as compared with baseline), reaching a peak at approximately 1-2 h post-e-cig aerosol inhalation and returning to baseline levels at 6 h. The circulatory burden of the serum (ICAM-1 and ROS) increased significantly at 2 h and returned to baseline values 6 h post-e-cig challenge. ROS production by HPMVEC was found to occur via activation of the NADPH oxidase 2 (NOX2) pathways. These findings suggest that even in the absence of nicotine, acute e-cig aerosol inhalation leads to a transient increase in oxidative stress and inflammation. This can adversely affect the vascular endothelial network by promoting oxidative stress and immune cell adhesion. Thus e-cig inhalation has the potential to drive the onset of vascular pathologies.
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Sistemas Eletrônicos de Liberação de Nicotina , Inflamação/etiologia , Nicotina/farmacologia , Poluição por Fumaça de Tabaco , Adulto , Células Endoteliais/efeitos dos fármacos , Células Endoteliais/metabolismo , Endotélio Vascular/efeitos dos fármacos , Endotélio Vascular/metabolismo , Feminino , Voluntários Saudáveis , Humanos , Inflamação/metabolismo , Pulmão/efeitos dos fármacos , Pulmão/metabolismo , Masculino , Estresse Oxidativo/efeitos dos fármacos , Espécies Reativas de Oxigênio/metabolismoRESUMO
Background Previous studies showed that nicotinized electronic cigarettes (hereafter, e-cigarettes) elicit systemic oxidative stress and inflammation. However, the effect of the aerosol alone on endothelial function is not fully understood. Purpose To quantify surrogate markers of endothelial function in nonsmokers after inhalation of aerosol from nicotine-free e-cigarettes. Materials and Methods In this prospective study (from May to September 2018), nonsmokers underwent 3.0-T MRI before and after inhaling nicotine-free e-cigarette aerosol. Peripheral vascular reactivity to cuff-induced ischemia was quantified by temporally resolving blood flow velocity and oxygenation (SvO2) in superficial femoral artery and vein, respectively, along with artery luminal flow-mediated dilation. Precuff occlusion, resistivity index, baseline blood flow velocity, and SvO2 were evaluated. During reactive hyperemia, blood flow velocity yielded peak velocity, time to peak, and acceleration rate (hyperemic index); SvO2 yielded washout time of oxygen-depleted blood, rate of resaturation, and maximum SvO2 increase (overshoot). Cerebrovascular reactivity was assessed in the superior sagittal sinus, evaluating the breath-hold index. Central arterial stiffness was measured via aortic pulse wave velocity. Differences before versus after e-cigarette vaping were tested with Hotelling T2 test. Results Thirty-one healthy never-smokers (mean age, 24.3 years ± 4.3; 14 women) were evaluated. After e-cigarette vaping, resistivity index was higher (0.03 of 1.30 [2.3%]; P < .05), luminal flow-mediated dilation severely blunted (-3.2% of 9.4% [-34%]; P < .001), along with reduced peak velocity (-9.9 of 56.6 cm/sec [-17.5%]; P < .001), hyperemic index (-3.9 of 15.1 cm/sec2 [-25.8%]; P < .001), and delayed time to peak (2.1 of 7.1 sec [29.6%]; P = .005); baseline SvO2 was lower (-13 of 65 %HbO2 [-20%]; P < .001) and overshoot higher (10 of 19 %HbO2 [52.6%]; P < .001); and aortic pulse wave velocity marginally increased (0.19 of 6.05 m/sec [3%]; P = .05). Remaining parameters did not change after aerosol inhalation. Conclusion Inhaling nicotine-free electronic cigarette aerosol transiently impacted endothelial function in healthy nonsmokers. Further studies are needed to address the potentially adverse long-term effects on vascular health. © RSNA, 2019 Online supplemental material is available for this article.
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Sistemas Eletrônicos de Liberação de Nicotina , Endotélio Vascular/fisiopatologia , Artéria Femoral/fisiopatologia , Veia Femoral/fisiopatologia , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Vaping/efeitos adversos , Adulto , Velocidade do Fluxo Sanguíneo/fisiologia , Endotélio Vascular/diagnóstico por imagem , Estudos de Avaliação como Assunto , Feminino , Artéria Femoral/diagnóstico por imagem , Veia Femoral/diagnóstico por imagem , Humanos , Masculino , Estudos Prospectivos , Análise de Onda de Pulso , Adulto JovemRESUMO
PURPOSE: To develop a dual-radiofrequency (RF), dual-echo, 3D ultrashort echo-time (UTE) pulse sequence and bone-selective image reconstruction for rapid high-resolution craniofacial MRI. METHODS: The proposed pulse sequence builds on recently introduced dual-RF UTE imaging. While yielding enhanced bone specificity by exploiting high sensitivity of short T2 signals to variable RF pulse widths, the parent technique exacts a 2-fold scan time penalty relative to standard dual-echo UTE. In the proposed method, the parent sequence's dual-RF scheme was incorporated into dual-echo acquisitions while radial view angles are varied every pulse-to-pulse repetition period. The resulting 4 echoes (2 for each RF) were combined by view-sharing to construct 2 sets of k-space data sets, corresponding to short and long TEs, respectively, leading to a 2-fold increase in imaging efficiency. Furthermore, by exploiting the sparsity of bone signals in echo-difference images, acceleration was achieved by solving a bone-sparsity constrained image reconstruction problem. In vivo studies were performed to evaluate the effectiveness of the proposed acceleration approaches in comparison to the parent method. RESULTS: The proposed technique achieves 1.1-mm isotropic skull imaging in 3 minutes without visual loss of image quality, compared to the parent technique (scan time = 12 minutes). Bone-specific images and corresponding 3D renderings of the skull were found to depict the expected craniofacial anatomy over the entire head. CONCLUSION: The proposed method is able to achieve high-resolution volumetric craniofacial images in a clinically practical imaging time, and thus may prove useful as a potential alternative to computed tomography.