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1.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 41(3): 408-415, 2020 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32165359

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Perfusion MR imaging measures of relative CBV can distinguish recurrent tumor from posttreatment radiation effects in high-grade gliomas. Currently, relative CBV measurement requires normalization based on user-defined reference tissues. A recently proposed method of relative CBV standardization eliminates the need for user input. This study compares the predictive performance of relative CBV standardization against relative CBV normalization for quantifying recurrent tumor burden in high-grade gliomas relative to posttreatment radiation effects. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We recruited 38 previously treated patients with high-grade gliomas (World Health Organization grades III or IV) undergoing surgical re-resection for new contrast-enhancing lesions concerning for recurrent tumor versus posttreatment radiation effects. We recovered 112 image-localized biopsies and quantified the percentage of histologic tumor content versus posttreatment radiation effects for each sample. We measured spatially matched normalized and standardized relative CBV metrics (mean, median) and fractional tumor burden for each biopsy. We compared relative CBV performance to predict tumor content, including the Pearson correlation (r), against histologic tumor content (0%-100%) and the receiver operating characteristic area under the curve for predicting high-versus-low tumor content using binary histologic cutoffs (≥50%; ≥80% tumor). RESULTS: Across relative CBV metrics, fractional tumor burden showed the highest correlations with tumor content (0%-100%) for normalized (r = 0.63, P < .001) and standardized (r = 0.66, P < .001) values. With binary cutoffs (ie, ≥50%; ≥80% tumor), predictive accuracies were similar for both standardized and normalized metrics and across relative CBV metrics. Median relative CBV achieved the highest area under the curve (normalized = 0.87, standardized = 0.86) for predicting ≥50% tumor, while fractional tumor burden achieved the highest area under the curve (normalized = 0.77, standardized = 0.80) for predicting ≥80% tumor. CONCLUSIONS: Standardization of relative CBV achieves similar performance compared with normalized relative CBV and offers an important step toward workflow optimization and consensus methodology.


Sujet(s)
Tumeurs du cerveau/imagerie diagnostique , Gliome/imagerie diagnostique , Interprétation d'images assistée par ordinateur/normes , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/normes , Neuroimagerie/méthodes , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Tumeurs du cerveau/anatomopathologie , Femelle , Gliome/anatomopathologie , Humains , Interprétation d'images assistée par ordinateur/méthodes , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Lésions radiques/imagerie diagnostique , Lésions radiques/anatomopathologie , Charge tumorale
2.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 40(9): 1445-1450, 2019 09.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31371360

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The percentage signal recovery in non-leakage-corrected (no preload, high flip angle, intermediate TE) DSC-MR imaging is known to differ significantly for glioblastoma, metastasis, and primary CNS lymphoma. Because the percentage signal recovery is influenced by preload and pulse sequence parameters, we investigated whether the percentage signal recovery can still differentiate these common contrast-enhancing neoplasms using a DSC-MR imaging protocol designed for relative CBV accuracy (preload, intermediate flip angle, low TE). MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed DSC-MR imaging of treatment-naïve, pathology-proved glioblastomas (n = 14), primary central nervous system lymphomas (n = 7), metastases (n = 20), and meningiomas (n = 13) using a protocol designed for relative CBV accuracy (a one-quarter-dose preload and single-dose bolus of gadobutrol, TR/TE = 1290/40 ms, flip angle = 60° at 1.5T). Mean percentage signal recovery, relative CBV, and normalized baseline signal intensity were compared within contrast-enhancing lesion volumes. Classification accuracy was determined by receiver operating characteristic analysis. RESULTS: Relative CBV best differentiated meningioma from glioblastoma and from metastasis with areas under the curve of 0.84 and 0.82, respectively. The percentage signal recovery best differentiated primary central nervous system lymphoma from metastasis with an area under the curve of 0.81. Relative CBV and percentage signal recovery were similar in differentiating primary central nervous system lymphoma from glioblastoma and from meningioma. Although neither relative CBV nor percentage signal recovery differentiated glioblastoma from metastasis, mean normalized baseline signal intensity achieved 86% sensitivity and 50% specificity. CONCLUSIONS: Similar to results for non-preload-based DSC-MR imaging, percentage signal recovery for one-quarter-dose preload-based, intermediate flip angle DSC-MR imaging differentiates most pair-wise comparisons of glioblastoma, metastasis, primary central nervous system lymphoma, and meningioma, except for glioblastoma versus metastasis. Differences in normalized post-preload baseline signal for glioblastoma and metastasis, reflecting a snapshot of dynamic contrast enhancement, may motivate the use of single-dose multiecho protocols permitting simultaneous quantification of DSC-MR imaging and dynamic contrast-enhanced MR imaging parameters.


Sujet(s)
Mesure du volume sanguin/méthodes , Volume sanguin , Tumeurs du cerveau/imagerie diagnostique , Imagerie par résonance magnétique de diffusion/méthodes , Glioblastome/imagerie diagnostique , Lymphomes/imagerie diagnostique , Méningiome/imagerie diagnostique , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Sujet âgé de 80 ans ou plus , Diagnostic différentiel , Femelle , Humains , Traitement d'image par ordinateur , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Métastase tumorale/imagerie diagnostique , Études rétrospectives , Sensibilité et spécificité
3.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 40(7): 1132-1139, 2019 07.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31248863

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Brain tumor clinical trials requiring solid tumor assessment typically rely on the 2D manual delineation of enhancing tumors by ≥2 expert readers, a time-consuming step with poor interreader agreement. As a solution, we developed quantitative dT1 maps for the delineation of enhancing lesions. This retrospective analysis compares dT1 with 2D manual delineation of enhancing tumors acquired at 2 time points during the post therapeutic surveillance period of the American College of Radiology Imaging Network 6677/Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 0625 (ACRIN 6677/RTOG 0625) clinical trial. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients enrolled in ACRIN 6677/RTOG 0625, a multicenter, randomized Phase II trial of bevacizumab in recurrent glioblastoma, underwent standard MR imaging before and after treatment initiation. For 123 patients from 23 institutions, both 2D manual delineation of enhancing tumors and dT1 datasets were evaluable at weeks 8 (n = 74) and 16 (n = 57). Using dT1, we assessed the radiologic response and progression at each time point. Percentage agreement with adjudicated 2D manual delineation of enhancing tumor reads and association between progression status and overall survival were determined. RESULTS: For identification of progression, dT1 and adjudicated 2D manual delineation of enhancing tumor reads were in perfect agreement at week 8, with 73.7% agreement at week 16. Both methods showed significant differences in overall survival at each time point. When nonprogressors were further divided into responders versus nonresponders/nonprogressors, the agreement decreased to 70.3% and 52.6%, yet dT1 showed a significant difference in overall survival at week 8 (P = .01), suggesting that dT1 may provide greater sensitivity for stratifying subpopulations. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that dT1 can predict early progression comparable with the standard method but offers the potential for substantial time and cost savings for clinical trials.


Sujet(s)
Tumeurs du cerveau/imagerie diagnostique , Glioblastome/imagerie diagnostique , Interprétation d'images assistée par ordinateur/méthodes , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Neuroimagerie/méthodes , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Antinéoplasiques immunologiques/usage thérapeutique , Bévacizumab/usage thérapeutique , Tumeurs du cerveau/traitement médicamenteux , Tumeurs du cerveau/anatomopathologie , Femelle , Glioblastome/traitement médicamenteux , Glioblastome/anatomopathologie , Humains , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Études rétrospectives , Charge tumorale
4.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 40(4): 626-633, 2019 04.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30923088

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: DSC-MR imaging using preload, intermediate (60°) flip angle and postprocessing leakage correction has gained traction as a standard methodology. Simulations suggest that DSC-MR imaging with flip angle = 30° and no preload yields relative CBV practically equivalent to the reference standard. This study tested this hypothesis in vivo. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eighty-four patients with brain lesions were enrolled in this 3-institution study. Forty-three patients satisfied the inclusion criteria. DSC-MR imaging (3T, single-dose gadobutrol, gradient recalled-echo-EPI, TE = 20-35 ms, TR = 1.2-1.63 seconds) was performed twice for each patient, with flip angle = 30°-35° and no preload (P-), which provided preload (P+) for the subsequent intermediate flip angle = 60°. Normalized relative CBV and standardized relative CBV maps were generated, including postprocessing with contrast agent leakage correction (C+) and without (C-) contrast agent leakage correction. Contrast-enhancing lesion volume, mean relative CBV, and contrast-to-noise ratio obtained with 30°/P-/C-, 30°/P-/C+, and 60°/P+/C- were compared with 60°/P+/C+ using the Lin concordance correlation coefficient and Bland-Altman analysis. Equivalence between the 30°/P-/C+ and 60°/P+/C+ protocols and the temporal SNR for the 30°/P- and 60°/P+ DSC-MR imaging data was also determined. RESULTS: Compared with 60°/P+/C+, 30°/P-/C+ had closest mean standardized relative CBV (P = .61), highest Lin concordance correlation coefficient (0.96), and lowest Bland-Altman bias (µ = 1.89), compared with 30°/P-/C- (P = .02, Lin concordance correlation coefficient = 0.59, µ = 14.6) and 60°/P+/C- (P = .03, Lin concordance correlation coefficient = 0.88, µ = -10.1) with no statistical difference in contrast-to-noise ratios across protocols. The normalized relative CBV and standardized relative CBV were statistically equivalent at the 10% level using either the 30°/P-/C+ or 60°/P+/C+ protocols. Temporal SNR was not significantly different for 30°/P- and 60°/P+ (P = .06). CONCLUSIONS: Tumor relative CBV derived from low-flip angle, no-preload DSC-MR imaging with leakage correction is an attractive single-dose alternative to the higher dose reference standard.


Sujet(s)
Tumeurs du cerveau/imagerie diagnostique , Interprétation d'images assistée par ordinateur/normes , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/normes , Neuroimagerie/normes , Adulte , Tumeurs du cerveau/anatomopathologie , Consensus , Produits de contraste , Femelle , Humains , Interprétation d'images assistée par ordinateur/méthodes , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Mâle , Neuroimagerie/méthodes , Composés organométalliques , Normes de référence
5.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 39(11): 1981-1988, 2018 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30309842

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The accuracy of DSC-MR imaging CBV maps in glioblastoma depends on acquisition and analysis protocols. Multisite protocol heterogeneity has challenged standardization initiatives due to the difficulties of in vivo validation. This study sought to compare the accuracy of routinely used protocols using a digital reference object. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The digital reference object consisted of approximately 10,000 simulated voxels recapitulating typical signal heterogeneity encountered in vivo. The influence of acquisition and postprocessing methods on CBV reliability was evaluated across 6912 parameter combinations, including contrast agent dosing schemes, pulse sequence parameters, field strengths, and postprocessing methods. Accuracy and precision were assessed using the concordance correlation coefficient and coefficient of variation. RESULTS: Across all parameter space, the optimal protocol included full-dose contrast agent preload and bolus, intermediate (60°) flip angle, 30-ms TE, and postprocessing with a leakage-correction algorithm (concordance correlation coefficient = 0.97, coefficient of variation = 6.6%). Protocols with no preload or fractional dose preload and bolus using these acquisition parameters were generally less robust. However, a protocol with no preload, full-dose bolus, and low (30°) flip angle performed very well (concordance correlation coefficient = 0.93, coefficient of variation = 8.7% at 1.5T and concordance correlation coefficient = 0.92, coefficient of variation = 8.2% at 3T). CONCLUSIONS: Schemes with full-dose preload and bolus maximize CBV accuracy and reduce variability, which could enable smaller sample sizes and more reliable detection of CBV changes in clinical trials. When a lower total contrast agent dose is desired, use of a low flip angle, no preload, and full-dose bolus protocol may provide an attractive alternative.


Sujet(s)
Tumeurs du cerveau/imagerie diagnostique , Glioblastome/imagerie diagnostique , Interprétation d'images assistée par ordinateur/normes , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/normes , Algorithmes , Produits de contraste/administration et posologie , Extravasation de produits diagnostiques ou thérapeutiques/imagerie diagnostique , Femelle , Humains , Interprétation d'images assistée par ordinateur/méthodes , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Mâle , Normes de référence , Reproductibilité des résultats
6.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 38(3): 478-484, 2017 Mar.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28034995

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: DSC perfusion MR imaging assumes that the contrast agent remains intravascular; thus, disruptions in the blood-brain barrier common in brain tumors can lead to errors in the estimation of relative CBV. Acquisition strategies, including the choice of flip angle, TE, TR, and preload dose and incubation time, along with post hoc leakage-correction algorithms, have been proposed as means for combating these leakage effects. In the current study, we used DSC-MR imaging simulations to examine the influence of these various acquisition parameters and leakage-correction strategies on the faithful estimation of CBV. MATERIALS AND METHODS: DSC-MR imaging simulations were performed in 250 tumors with perfusion characteristics randomly generated from the distributions of real tumor population data, and comparison of leakage-corrected CBV was performed with a theoretic curve with no permeability. Optimal strategies were determined by protocol with the lowest mean error. RESULTS: The following acquisition strategies (flip angle/TE/TR and contrast dose allocation for preload and bolus) produced high CBV fidelity, as measured by the percentage difference from a hypothetic tumor with no leakage: 1) 35°/35 ms/1.5 seconds with no preload and full dose for DSC-MR imaging, 2) 35°/25 ms/1.5 seconds with » dose preload and ¾ dose bolus, 3) 60°/35 ms/2.0 seconds with ½ dose preload and ½ dose bolus, and 4) 60°/35 ms/1.0 second with 1 dose preload and 1 dose bolus. CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest that a variety of strategies can yield similarly high fidelity in CBV estimation, namely those that balance T1- and T2*-relaxation effects due to contrast agent extravasation.


Sujet(s)
Algorithmes , Tumeurs du cerveau/imagerie diagnostique , Gliome/imagerie diagnostique , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Tumeurs du cerveau/vascularisation , Volume sanguin cérébral , Produits de contraste/administration et posologie , Fractionnement de la dose d'irradiation , Extravasation de produits diagnostiques ou thérapeutiques , Gliome/vascularisation , Humains , Mâle , Perfusion
7.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 37(8): 1440-6, 2016 Aug.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27079371

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Contrast agent extravasation through a disrupted blood-brain barrier potentiates inaccurate DSC MR imaging estimation of relative CBV. We explored whether incorporation of an interstitial washout rate in a leakage-correction model for single-echo, gradient-echo DSC MR imaging improves relative CBV estimates in high-grade gliomas. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We modified the traditional model-based postprocessing leakage-correction algorithm, assuming unidirectional contrast agent extravasation (Boxerman-Weisskoff model) to account for bidirectional contrast agent exchange between intra- and extravascular spaces (bidirectional model). For both models, we compared the goodness of fit with the parent leakage-contaminated relaxation rate curves by using the Akaike Information Criterion and the difference between modeled interstitial relaxation rate curves and dynamic contrast-enhanced MR imaging by using Euclidean distance in 21 patients with glioblastoma multiforme. RESULTS: The bidirectional model had improved Akaike Information Criterion versus the bidirectional model in >50% of enhancing tumor voxels in all 21 glioblastoma multiformes (77% ± 9%; P < .0001) and had reduced the Euclidean distance in >50% of enhancing tumor voxels for 17/21 glioblastoma multiformes (62% ± 17%; P = .0041). The bidirectional model and dynamic contrast-enhanced-derived kep demonstrated a strong correlation (r = 0.74 ± 0.13). On average, enhancing tumor relative CBV for the Boxerman-Weisskoff model exceeded that for the bidirectional model by 16.6% ± 14.0%. CONCLUSIONS: Inclusion of the bidirectional exchange in leakage-correction models for single-echo DSC MR imaging improves the model fit to leakage-contaminated DSC MR imaging data and significantly improves the estimation of relative CBV in high-grade gliomas.


Sujet(s)
Algorithmes , Tumeurs du cerveau/imagerie diagnostique , Extravasation de produits diagnostiques ou thérapeutiques/imagerie diagnostique , Gliome/imagerie diagnostique , Interprétation d'images assistée par ordinateur/méthodes , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Tumeurs du cerveau/anatomopathologie , Volume sanguin cérébral , Produits de contraste , Femelle , Gliome/anatomopathologie , Humains , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Modèles théoriques
8.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 34(7): 1364-9, 2013 Jul.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23413249

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Both technical and pathophysiologic factors affect PSR in DSC-MR imaging. We aimed to determine how TE, flip angle (α), and contrast dose impact PSR in high-grade gliomas. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively computed PSR maps for 22 patients with high-grade gliomas, comparing 3 DSC-MR imaging methods by using single-dose gadodiamide without preload administration: A (n = 7), α = 35°, TE = 54 ms; B (n = 5), α = 72°, TE = 30 ms; C (n = 10), α = 90°, TE = 30 ms. Methods A-C served as preload for subsequent dynamic imaging using method D (method C parameters but with double-dose contrast). We compared first- and second-injection tumor PSR for methods C and D (paired t test) and tumor PSR for both injections grouped by the first-injection acquisition method (3-group nonparametric 1-way ANOVA). We compared PSR in tumor and normal brain for each first- and second-injection method group (paired t test). RESULTS: First-injection PSR in tumor and normal brain differed significantly for methods B (P = .01) and C (P = .05), but not A (P = .71). First-injection tumor PSR increased with T1 weighting with a significant main effect of method groupings (P = .0012), but there was no significant main effect for first-injection normal brain (P = .93), or second-injection tumor (P = .95) or normal brain (P = .13). In patients scanned with methods C and D, first-injection PSR significantly exceeded second-injection PSR for tumor (P = .037) and normal brain (P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: PSR strongly depends on the T1 weighting of DSC-MR imaging, including pulse sequence (TE, α) and contrast agent (dose, preload) parameters, with implications for protocol design and the interpretation and comparison of PSR values across tumor types and imaging centers.


Sujet(s)
Tumeurs du cerveau/diagnostic , Produits de contraste/administration et posologie , Gliome/diagnostic , Amélioration d'image/méthodes , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Algorithmes , Astrocytome/diagnostic , Encéphale/anatomopathologie , Études de cohortes , Femelle , Acide gadopentétique/administration et posologie , Glioblastome/diagnostic , Humains , Injections veineuses , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Récidive tumorale locale/diagnostic , Oligodendrogliome/diagnostic , Études rétrospectives , Jeune adulte
9.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 33(10): 1893-900, 2012 Nov.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22627795

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: CTP may help triage acute stroke patients for IAT, but requires additional contrast agent, radiation, and imaging time. Our aim was to determine whether clinical examination (NIHSS) with NCCT and CTA can substitute for CTP without significantly affecting IAT triage of patients with acute MCA stroke. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We reviewed NCCT, CTA, and CTP imaging performed within 8 hours of symptom onset in 36 patients presenting with MCA territory stroke (September 2007-October 2009). Two neuroradiologists reviewed, independently and by consensus, NCCT, CTA, and CTP (CTP group), and 2 different neuroradiologists blinded to CTP reviewed NCCT, CTA, and NIHSS (stroke scale group) to determine IAT eligibility: M1 or proximal M2 occlusion; infarct core <1/3 MCA territory; and ischemic penumbra >20% infarct core. The stroke scale group estimated infarct core from NCCT and CTA source images and ischemic penumbra from core size relative to NIHSS score and re-evaluated patients after unblinding to CTP. We computed intragroup and intergroup κ scores for IAT treatment recommendation and used the McNemar test to determine whether CTP significantly affected the stroke scale group's decisions. RESULTS: IAT was recommended in 16/36 (44%) and 17/36 (47%) patients by the CTP and stroke scale groups, respectively, with intragroup κ scores of 0.78 ± 0.11 versus 0.83 ± 0.09. The intergroup κ score was 0.83 ± 0.09. When unblinded to CTP, the stroke scale group revised 2/36 (5.6%) decisions, which was insignificant (P = .48, McNemar test). CONCLUSIONS: NIHSS interpreted with NCCT and CTA may be an effective substitute for CTP-derived measures in the IAT triage of patients with acute MCA stroke. Replacing CTP may potentially reduce radiation and contrast dose and time to treatment.


Sujet(s)
Angiographie cérébrale/méthodes , Infarctus du territoire de l'artère cérébrale moyenne/imagerie diagnostique , Infarctus du territoire de l'artère cérébrale moyenne/thérapie , Imagerie de perfusion/méthodes , Accident vasculaire cérébral/imagerie diagnostique , Accident vasculaire cérébral/thérapie , Traitement thrombolytique/méthodes , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Sujet âgé de 80 ans ou plus , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , National Institutes of Health (USA) , Reproductibilité des résultats , Sensibilité et spécificité , Indice de gravité de la maladie , Résultat thérapeutique , Triage , États-Unis
10.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 33(6): 1081-7, 2012 Jun.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22322605

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Contrast extravasation in DSC-MRI potentiates inaccurate and imprecise estimates of glioma rCBV. We tested assertions that preload and postprocessing algorithms minimize this error by comparing Gd-rCBV using permutations of these 2 techniques with criterion standard rCBV using MION, an intravascular agent. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We imaged 7 Fisher rats with 9L gliosarcomas, by using 3T gradient-echo DSC-MRI with MION (2.0 mg Fe/kg) and staged injection of Gd-diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid: a 0.1-mmol/kg bolus provided no preload (P-) data and served as preload (P+) for a subsequent 0.2-mmol/kg bolus. We computed MION-rCBV (steady-state ΔR2*, tumor versus normal brain) and Gd-rCBV ΔR2* [t] integration) without (C-) and with (C+) postprocessing correction, thereby testing 4 correction permutations: P-C-, P-C+, P+C-, and P+C+. We tested whether each permutation reduced bias and variance of the Gd/MION rCBV differences by using generalized estimating equations and Fmax statistics (P < .05 significant). RESULTS: Gd-rCBV progressively better approximated MION-rCBV with increasing leakage correction. There was no statistically significant bias for the mean percentage deviation of Gd-rCBV from MION-rCBV for any correction permutation, but there was significantly reduced variance by using P+C- (22-fold), P-C+ (32-fold), and P+C+ (267-fold) compared with P-C-. P+C+ provided significant additional variance reduction compared with P+C- (12-fold) and P-C+ (8-fold). Linear regression of Gd-rCBV versus MION-rCBV revealed P+C+ to have the closest slope and intercept compared with the ideal, substantially better than P+C-. CONCLUSIONS: Preload and postprocessing correction significantly reduced the variance of Gd-rCBV estimates, and bias reduction approached significance. Postprocessing correction provide significant benefit beyond preload alone.


Sujet(s)
Mesure du volume sanguin/méthodes , Volume sanguin , Tumeurs du cerveau/physiopathologie , Acide gadopentétique , Gliosarcome/physiopathologie , Interprétation d'images assistée par ordinateur/méthodes , Angiographie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Animaux , Tumeurs du cerveau/anatomopathologie , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Produits de contraste , Gliosarcome/anatomopathologie , Rats , Rats de lignée F344 , Reproductibilité des résultats , Sensibilité et spécificité
11.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 33(7): 1247-50, 2012 Aug.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22322614

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Little is known about how commonly the internal jugular vein is compressed by extrinsic structures in the upper neck. The purpose of this paper was to identify the frequency and cause of external compression of the superior segment of the internal jugular vein. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Retrospective review of CT angiograms of the neck was performed in 108 consecutive patients. Axial source images were evaluated for moderate (>50%) or severe (>80%) stenosis of the internal jugular vein on the basis of external compression. The cause of extrinsic compression was also recorded. In cases with stenosis, the presence of ipsilateral isoattenuated collateral veins was recorded and considered representative of collateral flow. RESULTS: Moderate stenosis was seen in 33.3% of right and 25.9% of left internal jugular veins. Severe stenosis was seen in 24.1% of right and 18.5% of left internal jugular veins. The most common causes of extrinsic compression included the styloid process and the posterior belly of the digastric muscle. In patients with severe internal jugular vein stenosis, 53.8% of right sides and 55% of left sides had associated condylar collaterals. CONCLUSIONS: Extrinsic compression of the superior segment of the internal jugular vein is a common finding in unselected patients, often caused by the styloid process or the posterior belly of the digastric muscle. Presence of severe stenosis is not universally associated with collateral formation.


Sujet(s)
Veines jugulaires/imagerie diagnostique , Maladies vasculaires périphériques/imagerie diagnostique , Maladies vasculaires périphériques/épidémiologie , Phlébographie/statistiques et données numériques , Tomodensitométrie/statistiques et données numériques , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Sténose pathologique/imagerie diagnostique , Femelle , Humains , Incidence , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Études rétrospectives , Rhode Island/épidémiologie , Jeune adulte
12.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 27(4): 859-67, 2006 Apr.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16611779

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) estimates for high-grade gliomas computed with dynamic susceptibility contrast MR imaging are artificially lowered by contrast extravasation through a disrupted blood-brain barrier. We hypothesized that rCBV corrected for agent leakage would correlate significantly with histopathologic tumor grade, whereas uncorrected rCBV would not. METHODS: We performed dynamic T2*-weighted perfusion MR imaging on 43 patients with a cerebral glioma after prebolus gadolinium diethylene triamine penta-acetic acid administration to diminish competing extravasation-induced T1 effects. The rCBV was computed from non-necrotic enhancing tumor regions by integrating the relaxivity-time data, with and without contrast extravasation correction by using a linear fitting algorithm, and was normalized to contralateral brain. We determined the statistical correlation between corrected and uncorrected normalized rCBV and histopathologic tumor grade with the Spearman rank correlation test. RESULTS: Eleven, 9, and 23 patients had WHO grades II, III, and IV glioma, respectively. Mean uncorrected normalized rCBVs were 1.53, 2.51, and 2.14 (grade II, III, and IV). Corrected normalized rCBVs were 1.52, 2.84, and 3.96. Mean absolute discrepancies between uncorrected and corrected rCBVs were 2% (0%-15%), 16% (0%-106%), and 74% (0%-411%). The correlation between corrected rCBV and tumor grade was significant (0.60; P < .0001), whereas it was not for uncorrected rCBV (0.15; P = .35). CONCLUSION: For gliomas, rCBV estimation that correlates significantly with WHO tumor grade necessitates contrast extravasation correction. Without correction, artificially lowered rCBV may be construed erroneously to reflect lower tumor grade.


Sujet(s)
Volume sanguin , Cartographie cérébrale , Tumeurs du cerveau/anatomopathologie , Tumeurs du cerveau/physiopathologie , Extravasation de produits diagnostiques ou thérapeutiques/anatomopathologie , Extravasation de produits diagnostiques ou thérapeutiques/physiopathologie , Gliome/anatomopathologie , Gliome/physiopathologie , Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Adulte , Sujet âgé , Sujet âgé de 80 ans ou plus , Femelle , Humains , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen
13.
Circulation ; 104(11): 1214-7, 2001 Sep 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11551869

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: Oxygen (O(2)) homeostasis is central to myocardial tissue functioning, and increased O(2) demand is thought to be satisfied by a vasodilatory mechanism that results in increased blood and O(2) delivery. We applied blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) MRI in conjunction with vasodilatory stress to index the ability to augment intramyocardial oxygenation in hypertensive hypertrophy, the primary cause of heart failure. METHODS AND RESULTS: Nine healthy controls and 10 hypertensive subjects with moderate-to-severe hypertrophy underwent imaging on a 1.5 T clinical scanner. The dipyridamole-induced change in the apparent transverse relaxation rate, R2*, which correlates with hemoglobin oxygenation, was -5.4+/-2.2 s(-1) (95% CI, -4.0 to -6.8 s(-1)) in controls compared with -1.7+/-1.4 s(-1) (95% CI, -0.8 to -2.6 s(-1)) in hypertensive patients (P=0.0003). CONCLUSIONS: Patients with hypertensive hypertrophy demonstrate an impaired ability to increase intramyocardial oxygenation during vasodilatory stress, as indexed by BOLD MRI. The capacity to image vascular function with BOLD MRI may advance the understanding of the development of ventricular dysfunction in hypertension.


Sujet(s)
Hypertension artérielle/physiopathologie , Hypertrophie ventriculaire gauche/physiopathologie , Oxygène/sang , Vasodilatation , Adulte , Circulation coronarienne/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Vaisseaux coronaires/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Vaisseaux coronaires/physiopathologie , Dipyridamole/administration et posologie , Femelle , Humains , Hypertension artérielle/sang , Hypertension artérielle/complications , Hypertrophie ventriculaire gauche/sang , Hypertrophie ventriculaire gauche/étiologie , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Vasodilatation/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Vasodilatateurs/administration et posologie
14.
Acad Radiol ; 7(2): 83-93, 2000 Feb.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10730163

RÉSUMÉ

RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: Because the nature and time course of changes in early, nontraumatic osteonecrosis at perfusion and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging are unknown, the authors evaluated this technique in the assessment of early osteonecrosis with a nontraumatic model. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Five rabbits underwent intravenous injection of lipopolysaccharide endotoxin followed by intramuscular injection of methylprednisolone. MR imaging of the femora was performed before and at weekly intervals after endotoxin injection. Histologic findings from the areas of osteonecrosis were correlated with the findings of MR imaging and MR perfusion studies. RESULTS: Histologic evaluation showed osteonecrosis in six femora of four animals 2-4 weeks after endotoxin injection. Findings on T1-weighted images of the femur were normal in all animals; T2-weighted images of one femur showed equivocal changes. On MR perfusion images, the baseline mean peak percentage of enhancement was 52.7% +/- 12.6. In the six areas without osteonecrosis, the mean percentage of enhancement was similar to the baseline percentage of enhancement at 1 week (62.2% +/- 31.2). In the four areas with diffuse osteonecrosis, there was essentially no contrast enhancement 1-4 weeks after endotoxin injection. CONCLUSION: T1- and T2-weighted MR imaging is insensitive to the presence of early nontraumatic osteonecrosis. MR perfusion imaging might be useful to detect early nontraumatic osteonecrosis.


Sujet(s)
Imagerie par résonance magnétique , Ostéonécrose/diagnostic , Animaux , Produits de contraste , Escherichia coli , Fémur/anatomopathologie , Acide gadopentétique , Lipopolysaccharides , Ostéonécrose/étiologie , Ostéonécrose/anatomopathologie , Lapins
15.
Magn Reson Med ; 40(6): 793-9, 1998 Dec.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9840821

RÉSUMÉ

Tumor-sprouted vessels are greater in both number and diameter in comparison to their healthy counterparts. A novel technique based on magnetic susceptibility contrast mechanisms that are sensitive to varying sizes of blood vessels is presented to measure differences between the relaxation rates (1/T2 and 1/T2*) in a rat glioma model and normal cerebral cortex. deltaR2 and deltaR2*, the differences between relaxation rates precontrast and postcontrast agent injection, were measured for an intravascular equilibrium contrast agent (MION) at various echo times. Since deltaR2*/deltaR2 increases as vessel size increases, this ratio can be used as a measure of the average vessel size within an ROI or a voxel. The stability and longevity of the contrast agent within the vasculature were verified (n = 2 trials), and the ratio of deltaR2*/deltaR2 between the tumor and normal cortex was measured to be 1.9+/-0.2 (n = 4, echo time = 20 ms, and susceptibility difference (deltachi) approximately 10(-6)). This ratio compared favorably to a predicted ratio determined using histologically determined vessel sizes and theoretical Monte Carlo modeling results (1.9+/-0.1). Maps of the ratio of deltaR2*/deltaR2 were also made on a pixel-by-pixel basis. These techniques support the hypothesis that susceptibility contrast MRI can provide useful quantitative metrics of in vivo tumor vascular morphology.


Sujet(s)
Tumeurs du cerveau/vascularisation , Gliome/vascularisation , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Néovascularisation pathologique/anatomopathologie , Animaux , Tumeurs du cerveau/métabolisme , Tumeurs du cerveau/anatomopathologie , Produits de contraste , Oxyde ferrosoferrique , Acide gadopentétique , Gliome/métabolisme , Gliome/anatomopathologie , Immunohistochimie , Fer , Spectroscopie par résonance magnétique/instrumentation , Microcirculation/métabolisme , Microcirculation/anatomopathologie , Méthode de Monte Carlo , Néovascularisation pathologique/métabolisme , Oxydes , Répartition aléatoire , Rats
16.
Magn Reson Med ; 39(6): 988-98, 1998 Jun.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9621923

RÉSUMÉ

Cardiac echo-planar imaging suffers invariably from regions of severe distortion and T*2 decay in the myocardium. The purpose of this work was to perform local measurements of T*2 and field inhomogeneities in the myocardium and to identify the sources of focal signal loss and distortion. Field inhomogeneity maps and T*2 were measured in five normal volunteers in short-axis slices spanning from base to apex. It was found that T*2 ranged from 26 ms (SD = 7 ms, n = 5) to 41 ms (SD = 11 ms, n = 5) over most of the heart, and peak-to-peak field inhomogeneity differences were 71 Hz (SD = 14 Hz, n = 5). In all hearts, regions of severe signal loss were consistently adjacent to the posterior vein of the left ventricle; T*2 in these regions was 12 ms (SD = 2 ms, n = 5), and the difference in resonance frequency with the surrounding myocardium was 70-100 Hz. These effects may be caused by increased magnetic susceptibility from deoxygenated blood in these veins.


Sujet(s)
Imagerie échoplanaire/instrumentation , Coeur/anatomie et histologie , Amélioration d'image/instrumentation , Traitement d'image par ordinateur/instrumentation , Artéfacts , Vaisseaux coronaires/anatomie et histologie , Septum du coeur/anatomie et histologie , Ventricules cardiaques/anatomie et histologie , Humains , Sensibilité et spécificité
17.
Radiographics ; 18(3): 543-64, 1998.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9599382

RÉSUMÉ

A "one-stop shop" for evaluating cardiac disease with magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is progressing toward clinical reality and promises to have a major effect on the care of patients with cardiac disease. T1-weighted conventional spin-echo imaging gated to the cardiac cycle yields good anatomic detail but requires long imaging times and provides only static images of a single cardiac phase. Fast MR imaging with electrocardiographically (ECG) gated, low-flip-angle, segmented k-space gradient-recalled-echo (GRE) sequences provides excellent image quality with sufficiently high temporal resolution to "freeze" cardiac motion. Segmented k-space sequences improve on standard ECG-gated GRE sequences by allowing many cardiac phases, or frames of a cine sequence, to be imaged in a single breath hold with prospective cardiac gating. As commercial implementations of segmented k-space imaging become more widely available, the applications of this technique are expanding from research protocols to include many clinical applications in the heart and great vessels. Such applications include evaluation of vascular anatomy (coronary angiography, aortic disease, aberrant vessels, vascular access), cardiac anatomy (congenital anomalies, right ventricular dysplasia, constrictive pericarditis, valvular function), myocardial perfusion, and myocardial wall motion.


Sujet(s)
Maladies cardiovasculaires/diagnostic , Système cardiovasculaire/physiopathologie , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Maladies cardiovasculaires/anatomopathologie , Maladies cardiovasculaires/physiopathologie , Système cardiovasculaire/anatomopathologie , Humains
20.
J Magn Reson Imaging ; 7(3): 528-37, 1997.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9170038

RÉSUMÉ

The use of cerebral blood volume (CBV) maps generated from dynamic MRI studies tracking the bolus passage of paramagnetic contrast agents strongly depends on the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the maps. The authors present a semianalytic model for the noise in CBV maps and introduce analytic and Monte Carlo techniques for determining the effect of experimental parameters and processing strategies upon CBV-SNR. CBV-SNR increases as more points are used to estimate the baseline signal level. For typical injections, maps made with 10 baseline points have 34% more noise than those made with 50 baseline points. For a given peak percentage signal drop, an optimum TE can be chosen that, in general, is less than the baseline T2. However, because CBV-SNR is relatively insensitive to TE around this optimum value, choosing TE approximately equal to T2 does not sacrifice much SNR for typical doses of contrast agent. The TR that maximizes spin-echo CBV-SNR satisfies TR/T1 approximately equal to 1.26, whereas as short a TR as possible should be used to maximize gradient-echo CBV-SNR. In general, CBV-SNR is maximized for a given dose of contrast agent by selecting as short an input bolus duration as possible. For image SNR exceeding 20-30, the gamma-fitting procedure adds little extra noise compared with simple numeric integration. However, for noisier input images, can be the case for high resolution echo-planar images, the covarying parameters of the gamma-variate fit broaden the distribution of the CBV estimate and thereby decrease CBV-SNR. The authors compared the analytic noise predicted by their model with that of actual patient data and found that the analytic model accounts for roughly 70% of the measured variability of CBV within white matter regions of interest.


Sujet(s)
Volume sanguin/physiologie , Cartographie cérébrale , Encéphale/anatomie et histologie , Encéphale/vascularisation , Imagerie par résonance magnétique/méthodes , Traitement du signal assisté par ordinateur , Spectroscopie de résonance de spin électronique , Humains , Amélioration d'image/méthodes , Modèles cardiovasculaires , Modèles statistiques , Modèles théoriques , Méthode de Monte Carlo , Reproductibilité des résultats , Sensibilité et spécificité
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