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1.
Aging Cell ; : e14166, 2024 Apr 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38659245

RESUMO

Gray matter (GM) alterations play a role in aging-related disorders like Alzheimer's disease and related dementias, yet MRI studies mainly focus on macroscopic changes. Although reliable indicators of atrophy, morphological metrics like cortical thickness lack the sensitivity to detect early changes preceding visible atrophy. Our study aimed at exploring the potential of diffusion MRI in unveiling sensitive markers of cortical and subcortical age-related microstructural changes and assessing their associations with cognitive and behavioral deficits. We leveraged the Human Connectome Project-Aging cohort that included 707 participants (394 female; median age = 58, range = 36-90 years) and applied the powerful mean apparent diffusion propagator model to measure microstructural parameters, along with comprehensive behavioral and cognitive test scores. Both macro- and microstructural GM characteristics were strongly associated with age, with widespread significant microstructural correlations reflective of cellular morphological changes, reduced cellular density, increased extracellular volume, and increased membrane permeability. Importantly, when correlating MRI and cognitive test scores, our findings revealed no link between macrostructural volumetric changes and neurobehavioral performance. However, we found that cellular and extracellular alterations in cortical and subcortical GM regions were associated with neurobehavioral performance. Based on these findings, it is hypothesized that increased microstructural heterogeneity and decreased neurite orientation dispersion precede macrostructural changes, and that they play an important role in subsequent cognitive decline. These alterations are suggested to be early markers of neurocognitive performance that may distinctly aid in identifying the mechanisms underlying phenotypic aging and subsequent age-related functional decline.

2.
Magn Reson Med ; 91(6): 2431-2442, 2024 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38368618

RESUMO

PURPOSE: We report the design concept and fabrication of MRI phantoms, containing blocks of aligned microcapillaires that can be stacked into larger arrays to construct diameter distribution phantoms or fractured, to create a "powder-averaged" emulsion of randomly oriented blocks for vetting or calibrating advanced MRI methods, that is, diffusion tensor imaging, AxCaliber MRI, MAP-MRI, and multiple pulsed field gradient or double diffusion-encoded microstructure imaging methods. The goal was to create a susceptibility-matched microscopically anisotropic but macroscopically isotropic phantom with a ground truth diameter that could be used to vet advanced diffusion methods for diameter determination in fibrous tissues. METHODS: Two-photon polymerization, a novel three-dimensional printing method is used to fabricate blocks of capillaries. Double diffusion encoding methods were employed and analyzed to estimate the expected MRI diameter. RESULTS: Susceptibility-matched microcapillary blocks or modules that can be assembled into large-scale MRI phantoms have been fabricated and measured using advanced diffusion methods, resulting in microscopic anisotropy and random orientation. CONCLUSION: This phantom can vet and calibrate various advanced MRI methods and multiple pulsed field gradient or diffusion-encoded microstructure imaging methods. We demonstrated that two double diffusion encoding methods underestimated the ground truth diameter.


Assuntos
Imagem de Tensor de Difusão , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Capilares , Imagens de Fantasmas , Anisotropia , Impressão Tridimensional , Imagem de Difusão por Ressonância Magnética/métodos
3.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jan 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38260525

RESUMO

Gray matter (GM) alterations play a role in aging-related disorders like Alzheimer's disease and related dementias, yet MRI studies mainly focus on macroscopic changes. Although reliable indicators of atrophy, morphological metrics like cortical thickness lack the sensitivity to detect early changes preceding visible atrophy. Our study aimed at exploring the potential of diffusion MRI in unveiling sensitive markers of cortical and subcortical age-related microstructural changes and assessing their associations with cognitive and behavioral deficits. We leveraged the Human Connectome Project-Aging cohort that included 707 unimpaired participants (394 female; median age = 58, range = 36-90 years) and applied the powerful mean apparent diffusion propagator model to measure microstructural parameters, along with comprehensive behavioral and cognitive test scores. Both macro- and microstructural GM characteristics were strongly associated with age, with widespread significant microstructural correlations reflective of cellular morphological changes, reduced cellular density, increased extracellular volume, and increased membrane permeability. Importantly, when correlating MRI and cognitive test scores, our findings revealed no link between macrostructural volumetric changes and neurobehavioral performance. However, we found that cellular and extracellular alterations in cortical and subcortical GM regions were associated with neurobehavioral performance. Based on these findings, it is hypothesized that increased microstructural heterogeneity and decreased neurite orientation dispersion precede macrostructural changes, and that they play an important role in subsequent cognitive decline. These alterations are suggested to be early markers of neurocognitive performance that may distinctly aid in identifying the mechanisms underlying phenotypic aging and subsequent age-related functional decline.

4.
Brain Commun ; 5(6): fcad258, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37953850

RESUMO

Human evolution has seen the development of higher-order cognitive and social capabilities in conjunction with the unique laminar cytoarchitecture of the human cortex. Moreover, early-life cortical maldevelopment has been associated with various neurodevelopmental diseases. Despite these connections, there is currently no noninvasive technique available for imaging the detailed cortical laminar structure. This study aims to address this scientific and clinical gap by introducing an approach for imaging human cortical lamina. This method combines diffusion-relaxation multidimensional MRI with a tailored unsupervised machine learning approach that introduces enhanced microstructural sensitivity. This new imaging method simultaneously encodes the microstructure, the local chemical composition and importantly their correlation within complex and heterogenous tissue. To validate our approach, we compared the intra-cortical layers obtained using our ex vivo MRI-based method with those derived from Nissl staining of postmortem human brain specimens. The integration of unsupervised learning with diffusion-relaxation correlation MRI generated maps that demonstrate sensitivity to areal differences in cytoarchitectonic features observed in histology. Significantly, our observations revealed layer-specific diffusion-relaxation signatures, showing reductions in both relaxation times and diffusivities at the deeper cortical levels. These findings suggest a radial decrease in myelin content and changes in cell size and anisotropy, reflecting variations in both cytoarchitecture and myeloarchitecture. Additionally, we demonstrated that 1D relaxation and high-order diffusion MRI scalar indices, even when aggregated and used jointly in a multimodal fashion, cannot disentangle the cortical layers. Looking ahead, our technique holds the potential to open new avenues of research in human neurodevelopment and the vast array of disorders caused by disruptions in neurodevelopment.

5.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Oct 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37987005

RESUMO

Diffusion MRI with free gradient waveforms, combined with simultaneous relaxation encoding, referred to as multidimensional MRI (MD-MRI), offers microstructural specificity in complex biological tissue. This approach delivers intravoxel information about the microstructure, local chemical composition, and importantly, how these properties are coupled within heterogeneous tissue containing multiple microenvironments. Recent theoretical advances incorporated diffusion time dependency and integrated MD-MRI with concepts from oscillating gradients. This framework probes the diffusion frequency, ω, in addition to the diffusion tensor, D, and relaxation, R1, R2, correlations. A D(ω)-R1-R2 clinical imaging protocol was then introduced, with limited brain coverage and 3 mm3 voxel size, which hinder brain segmentation and future cohort studies. In this study, we introduce an efficient, sparse in vivo MD-MRI acquisition protocol providing whole brain coverage at 2 mm3 voxel size. We demonstrate its feasibility and robustness using a well-defined phantom and repeated scans of five healthy individuals. Additionally, we test different denoising strategies to address the sparse nature of this protocol, and show that efficient MD-MRI encoding design demands a nuanced denoising approach. The MD-MRI framework provides rich information that allows resolving the diffusion frequency dependence into intravoxel components based on their D(ω)-R1-R2 distribution, enabling the creation of microstructure-specific maps in the human brain. Our results encourage the broader adoption and use of this new imaging approach for characterizing healthy and pathological tissues.

6.
Brain Commun ; 5(5): fcad253, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37901038

RESUMO

Chronic traumatic encephalopathy is a neurodegenerative disease that is diagnosed and staged based on the localization and extent of phosphorylated tau pathology. Although its identification remains the primary diagnostic criteria to distinguish chronic traumatic encephalopathy from other tauopathies, the hyperphosphorylated tau that accumulates in neurofibrillary tangles in cortical grey matter and perivascular regions is often accompanied by concomitant pathology such as astrogliosis. Mean apparent propagator MRI is a clinically feasible diffusion MRI method that is suitable to characterize microstructure of complex biological media efficiently and comprehensively. We performed quantitative correlations between propagator metrics and underlying phosphorylated tau and astroglial pathology in a cross-sectional study of 10 ex vivo human tissue specimens with 'high chronic traumatic encephalopathy' at 0.25 mm isotropic voxels. Linear mixed effects analysis of regions of interest showed significant relationships of phosphorylated tau with propagator-estimated non-Gaussianity in cortical grey matter (P = 0.002) and of astrogliosis with propagator anisotropy in superficial cortical white matter (P = 0.0009). The positive correlation between phosphorylated tau and non-Gaussianity was found to be modest but significant (R2 = 0.44, P = 6.0 × 10-5) using linear regression. We developed an unsupervised clustering algorithm with non-Gaussianity and propagator anisotropy as inputs, which was able to identify voxels in superficial cortical white matter that corresponded to astrocytes that were accumulated at the grey-white matter interface. Our results suggest that mean apparent propagator MRI at high spatial resolution provides a means to not only identify phosphorylated tau pathology but also detect regions with astrocytic pathology and may therefore prove diagnostically valuable in the evaluation of concomitant pathology in cortical tissue with complex microstructure.

7.
J Spec Oper Med ; 23(4): 47-56, 2023 Dec 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37851859

RESUMO

United States Special Operations Forces (SOF) personnel are frequently exposed to explosive blasts in training and combat. However, the effects of repeated blast exposure on the human brain are incompletely understood. Moreover, there is currently no diagnostic test to detect repeated blast brain injury (rBBI). In this "Human Performance Optimization" article, we discuss how the development and implementation of a reliable diagnostic test for rBBI has the potential to promote SOF brain health, combat readiness, and quality of life.


Assuntos
Traumatismos por Explosões , Militares , Humanos , Estados Unidos , Qualidade de Vida , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Traumatismos por Explosões/diagnóstico , Traumatismos por Explosões/terapia , Explosões
8.
Neurobiol Aging ; 124: 104-116, 2023 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36641369

RESUMO

The relationship between brain microstructure and aging has been the subject of intense study, with diffusion MRI perhaps the most effective modality for elucidating these associations. Here, we used the mean apparent propagator (MAP)-MRI framework, which is suitable to characterize complex microstructure, to investigate age-related cerebral differences in a cohort of cognitively unimpaired participants and compared the results to those derived using diffusion tensor imaging. We studied MAP-MRI metrics, among them the non-Gaussianity (NG) and propagator anisotropy (PA), and established an opposing pattern in white matter of higher NG alongside lower PA among older adults, likely indicative of axonal degradation. In gray matter, however, these two indices were consistent with one another, and exhibited regional pattern heterogeneity compared to other microstructural parameters, which could indicate fewer neuronal projections across cortical layers along with an increased glial concentration. In addition, we report regional variations in the magnitude of age-related microstructural differences consistent with the posterior-anterior shift in aging paradigm. These results encourage further investigations in cognitive impairments and neurodegeneration.


Assuntos
Substância Branca , Humanos , Idoso , Substância Branca/diagnóstico por imagem , Longevidade , Imagem de Tensor de Difusão/métodos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Envelhecimento , Substância Cinzenta/diagnóstico por imagem , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem
9.
Brain ; 146(3): 1212-1226, 2023 03 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35953450

RESUMO

There are currently no non-invasive imaging methods available for astrogliosis assessment or mapping in the central nervous system despite its essential role in the response to many disease states, such as infarcts, neurodegenerative conditions, traumatic brain injury and infection. Multidimensional MRI is an increasingly employed imaging modality that maximizes the amount of encoded chemical and microstructural information by probing relaxation (T1 and T2) and diffusion mechanisms simultaneously. Here, we harness the exquisite sensitivity of this imagining modality to derive a signature of astrogliosis and disentangle it from normative brain at the individual level using machine learning. We investigated ex vivo cerebral cortical tissue specimens derived from seven subjects who sustained blast-induced injuries, which resulted in scar-border forming astrogliosis without being accompanied by other types of neuropathological abnormality, and from seven control brain donors. By performing a combined post-mortem radiology and histopathology correlation study we found that astrogliosis induces microstructural and chemical changes that are robustly detected with multidimensional MRI, and which can be attributed to astrogliosis because no axonal damage, demyelination or tauopathy were histologically observed in any of the cases in the study. Importantly, we showed that no one-dimensional T1, T2 or diffusion MRI measurement can disentangle the microscopic alterations caused by this neuropathology. Based on these findings, we developed a within-subject anomaly detection procedure that generates MRI-based astrogliosis biomarker maps ex vivo, which were significantly and strongly correlated with co-registered histological images of increased glial fibrillary acidic protein deposition (r = 0.856, P < 0.0001; r = 0.789, P < 0.0001; r = 0.793, P < 0.0001, for diffusion-T2, diffusion-T1 and T1-T2 multidimensional data sets, respectively). Our findings elucidate the underpinning of MRI signal response from astrogliosis, and the demonstrated high spatial sensitivity and specificity in detecting reactive astrocytes at the individual level, and if reproduced in vivo, will significantly impact neuroimaging studies of injury, disease, repair and aging, in which astrogliosis has so far been an invisible process radiologically.


Assuntos
Lesões Encefálicas Traumáticas , Gliose , Humanos , Gliose/patologia , Astrócitos/metabolismo , Encéfalo/patologia , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Lesões Encefálicas Traumáticas/complicações , Proteína Glial Fibrilar Ácida/metabolismo
11.
Neuroimage ; 243: 118530, 2021 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34464739

RESUMO

The first phase of the Human Connectome Project pioneered advances in MRI technology for mapping the macroscopic structural connections of the living human brain through the engineering of a whole-body human MRI scanner equipped with maximum gradient strength of 300 mT/m, the highest ever achieved for human imaging. While this instrument has made important contributions to the understanding of macroscale connectional topology, it has also demonstrated the potential of dedicated high-gradient performance scanners to provide unparalleled in vivo assessment of neural tissue microstructure. Building on the initial groundwork laid by the original Connectome scanner, we have now embarked on an international, multi-site effort to build the next-generation human 3T Connectome scanner (Connectome 2.0) optimized for the study of neural tissue microstructure and connectional anatomy across multiple length scales. In order to maximize the resolution of this in vivo microscope for studies of the living human brain, we will push the diffusion resolution limit to unprecedented levels by (1) nearly doubling the current maximum gradient strength from 300 mT/m to 500 mT/m and tripling the maximum slew rate from 200 T/m/s to 600 T/m/s through the design of a one-of-a-kind head gradient coil optimized to minimize peripheral nerve stimulation; (2) developing high-sensitivity multi-channel radiofrequency receive coils for in vivo and ex vivo human brain imaging; (3) incorporating dynamic field monitoring to minimize image distortions and artifacts; (4) developing new pulse sequences to integrate the strongest diffusion encoding and highest spatial resolution ever achieved in the living human brain; and (5) calibrating the measurements obtained from this next-generation instrument through systematic validation of diffusion microstructural metrics in high-fidelity phantoms and ex vivo brain tissue at progressively finer scales with accompanying diffusion simulations in histology-based micro-geometries. We envision creating the ultimate diffusion MRI instrument capable of capturing the complex multi-scale organization of the living human brain - from the microscopic scale needed to probe cellular geometry, heterogeneity and plasticity, to the mesoscopic scale for quantifying the distinctions in cortical structure and connectivity that define cyto- and myeloarchitectonic boundaries, to improvements in estimates of macroscopic connectivity.


Assuntos
Conectoma/métodos , Imagem de Difusão por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Neuroimagem/métodos , Imagens de Fantasmas
12.
Magn Reson Med ; 86(6): 2987-3011, 2021 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34411331

RESUMO

Microstructure imaging seeks to noninvasively measure and map microscopic tissue features by pairing mathematical modeling with tailored MRI protocols. This article reviews an emerging paradigm that has the potential to provide a more detailed assessment of tissue microstructure-combined diffusion-relaxometry imaging. Combined diffusion-relaxometry acquisitions vary multiple MR contrast encodings-such as b-value, gradient direction, inversion time, and echo time-in a multidimensional acquisition space. When paired with suitable analysis techniques, this enables quantification of correlations and coupling between multiple MR parameters-such as diffusivity, T1 , T2 , and T2∗ . This opens the possibility of disentangling multiple tissue compartments (within voxels) that are indistinguishable with single-contrast scans, enabling a new generation of microstructural maps with improved biological sensitivity and specificity.


Assuntos
Encéfalo , Imagem de Difusão por Ressonância Magnética , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Difusão , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Modelos Teóricos
13.
Brain ; 144(3): 800-816, 2021 04 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33739417

RESUMO

Axonal injury is a major contributor to the clinical symptomatology in patients with traumatic brain injury. Conventional neuroradiological tools, such as CT and MRI, are insensitive to diffuse axonal injury (DAI) caused by trauma. Diffusion tensor MRI parameters may change in DAI lesions; however, the nature of these changes is inconsistent. Multidimensional MRI is an emerging approach that combines T1, T2, and diffusion, and replaces voxel-averaged values with distributions, which allows selective isolation of specific potential abnormal components. By performing a combined post-mortem multidimensional MRI and histopathology study, we aimed to investigate T1-T2-diffusion changes linked to DAI and to define their histopathological correlates. Corpora callosa derived from eight subjects who had sustained traumatic brain injury, and three control brain donors underwent post-mortem ex vivo MRI at 7 T. Multidimensional, diffusion tensor, and quantitative T1 and T2 MRI data were acquired and processed. Following MRI acquisition, slices from the same tissue were tested for amyloid precursor protein (APP) immunoreactivity to define DAI severity. A robust image co-registration method was applied to accurately match MRI-derived parameters and histopathology, after which 12 regions of interest per tissue block were selected based on APP density, but blind to MRI. We identified abnormal multidimensional T1-T2, diffusion-T2, and diffusion-T1 components that are strongly associated with DAI and used them to generate axonal injury images. We found that compared to control white matter, mild and severe DAI lesions contained significantly larger abnormal T1-T2 component (P = 0.005 and P < 0.001, respectively), and significantly larger abnormal diffusion-T2 component (P = 0.005 and P < 0.001, respectively). Furthermore, within patients with traumatic brain injury the multidimensional MRI biomarkers differentiated normal-appearing white matter from mild and severe DAI lesions, with significantly larger abnormal T1-T2 and diffusion-T2 components (P = 0.003 and P < 0.001, respectively, for T1-T2; P = 0.022 and P < 0.001, respectively, for diffusion-T2). Conversely, none of the conventional quantitative MRI parameters were able to differentiate lesions and normal-appearing white matter. Lastly, we found that the abnormal T1-T2, diffusion-T1, and diffusion-T2 components and their axonal damage images were strongly correlated with quantitative APP staining (r = 0.876, P < 0.001; r = 0.727, P < 0.001; and r = 0.743, P < 0.001, respectively), while producing negligible intensities in grey matter and in normal-appearing white matter. These results suggest that multidimensional MRI may provide non-invasive biomarkers for detection of DAI, which is the pathological substrate for neurological disorders ranging from concussion to severe traumatic brain injury.


Assuntos
Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Encéfalo/patologia , Lesão Axonal Difusa/diagnóstico por imagem , Lesão Axonal Difusa/patologia , Neuroimagem/métodos , Adulto , Idoso , Feminino , Humanos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade
14.
Front Phys ; 92021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37408700

RESUMO

Multidimensional MRI is an emerging approach that simultaneously encodes water relaxation (T1 and T2) and mobility (diffusion) and replaces voxel-averaged values with subvoxel distributions of those MR properties. While conventional (i.e., voxel-averaged) MRI methods cannot adequately quantify the microscopic heterogeneity of biological tissue, using subvoxel information allows to selectively map a specific T1-T2-diffusion spectral range that corresponds to a group of tissue elements. The major obstacle to the adoption of rich, multidimensional MRI protocols for diagnostic or monitoring purposes is the prolonged scan time. Our main goal in the present study is to evaluate the performance of a nonlocal estimation of multispectral magnitudes (NESMA) filter on reduced datasets to limit the total acquisition time required for reliable multidimensional MRI characterization of the brain. Here we focused and reprocessed results from a recent study that identified potential imaging biomarkers of axonal injury pathology from the joint analysis of multidimensional MRI, in particular voxelwise T1-T2 and diffusion-T2 spectra in human Corpus Callosum, and histopathological data. We tested the performance of NESMA and its effect on the accuracy of the injury biomarker maps, relative to the co-registered histological reference. Noise reduction improved the accuracy of the resulting injury biomarker maps, while permitting data reduction of 35.7 and 59.6% from the full dataset for T1-T2 and diffusion-T2 cases, respectively. As successful clinical proof-of-concept applications of multidimensional MRI are continuously being introduced, reliable and robust noise removal and consequent acquisition acceleration would advance the field towards clinically-feasible diagnostic multidimensional MRI protocols.

15.
J Magn Reson Open ; 2-32020 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33345200

RESUMO

Pulsed gradient spin echo (PGSE) complex signal behavior becomes dominated by attenuation rather than oscillation when displacements due to flow are similar or less than diffusive displacements. In this "slow-flow" regime, the optimal displacement encoding parameter q for phase contrast velocimetry depends on the diffusive length scale q s l o w = 1 / l D = 1 / 2 D Δ rather than the velocity encoding parameter v enc = π/(qΔ). The minimum detectable mean velocity using the difference between the phase at +q slow and -q slow is 〈 v m i n 〉 = 1 / SNR D / Δ . These theories are then validated and applied to MRI by performing PGSE echo planar imaging experiments on water flowing through a column with a bulk region and a beadpack region at controlled flow rates. Velocities as slow as 6 µm/s are detected with velocimetry. Theories, MRI experimental protocols, and validation on a controlled phantom help to bridge the gap between porous media NMR and pre-clinical phase contrast and diffusion MRI.

16.
J Magn Reson ; 317: 106782, 2020 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32679514

RESUMO

Diffusion exchange spectroscopy (DEXSY) provides a means to isolate the signal attenuation associated with exchange from other sources of signal loss. With the total diffusion weighting b1+b2=bs held constant, DEXSY signals acquired with b1=0 or b2=0 have no exchange weighting, while a DEXSY signal acquired with b1=b2 has maximal exchange weighting. The exchange rate can be estimated by fitting a diffusion exchange model to signals acquired with variable mixing times. Conventionally, acquired signals are normalized by a signal with b1=0 and b2=0 to remove the decay due to spin-lattice relaxation. Instead, division by a signal with equal bs but b1=0 or b2=0 reduces spin-lattice relaxation weighting of the apparent exchange rate (AXR). Furthermore, apparent diffusion-weighted R1 relaxation rates can be estimated from non-exchange-weighted DEXSY signals. Estimated R1 values are utilized to remove signal decay due to spin-lattice relaxation from exchange-weighted signals, permitting a more precise estimate of AXR with less data. Data reduction methods are proposed and tested with regards to statistical accuracy and precision of AXR estimates on simulated and experimental data. Simulations show that the methods are capable of accurately measuring the ground-truth exchange rate. The methods remain accurate even when the assumption that DEXSY signals attenuate with b is violated, as occurs for restricted diffusion. Experimental data was collected from fixed neonatal mouse spinal cord samples at 25 and 7°C using the strong static magnetic field gradient produced by a single-sided permanent magnet (i.e., an NMR MOUSE). The most rapid method for exchange measurements requires only five data points (an 80 s experiment as implemented) and achieves a similar level of accuracy and precision to the baseline method using 44 data points. This represents a significant improvement in acquisition speed, overcoming a barrier which has limited the use of DEXSY on living specimen.


Assuntos
Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Medula Espinal/metabolismo , Animais , Animais Recém-Nascidos , Meios de Contraste/química , Difusão , Desenho de Equipamento , Gadolínio DTPA/química , Técnicas In Vitro , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/instrumentação , Camundongos , Sensibilidade e Especificidade , Água/química
17.
Neuroimage ; 221: 117195, 2020 11 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32726643

RESUMO

We describe a practical two-dimensional (2D) diffusion MRI framework to deliver specificity and improve sensitivity to axonal injury in the spinal cord. This approach provides intravoxel distributions of correlations of water mobilities in orthogonal directions, revealing sub-voxel diffusion components. Here we use it to investigate water diffusivities along axial and radial orientations within spinal cord specimens with confirmed, tract-specific axonal injury. First, we show using transmission electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry that tract-specific axonal beading occurs following Wallerian degeneration in the cortico-spinal tract as direct sequelae to closed head injury. We demonstrate that although some voxel-averaged diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) metrics are sensitive to this axonal injury, they are non-specific, i.e., they do not reveal an underlying biophysical mechanism of injury. Then we employ 2D diffusion correlation imaging (DCI) to improve discrimination of different water microenvironments by measuring and mapping the joint water mobility distributions perpendicular and parallel to the spinal cord axis. We determine six distinct diffusion spectral components that differ according to their microscopic anisotropy and mobility. We show that at the injury site a highly anisotropic diffusion component completely disappears and instead becomes more isotropic. Based on these findings, an injury-specific MR image of the spinal cord was generated, and a radiological-pathological correlation with histological silver staining % area was performed. The resulting strong and significant correlation (r=0.70,p < 0.0001) indicates the high specificity with which DCI detects injury-induced tissue alterations. We predict that the ability to selectively image microstructural changes following axonal injury in the spinal cord can be useful in clinical and research applications by enabling specific detection and increased sensitivity to injury-induced microstructural alterations. These results also encourage us to translate DCI to higher spatial dimensions to enable assessment of traumatic axonal injury, and possibly other diseases and disorders in the brain.


Assuntos
Axônios/patologia , Medula Cervical/diagnóstico por imagem , Imagem de Difusão por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Traumatismos Cranianos Fechados/complicações , Neuroimagem/métodos , Tratos Piramidais/diagnóstico por imagem , Degeneração Walleriana/diagnóstico por imagem , Animais , Medula Cervical/patologia , Tomografia com Microscopia Eletrônica , Furões , Imuno-Histoquímica , Masculino , Tratos Piramidais/patologia , Sensibilidade e Especificidade , Degeneração Walleriana/etiologia , Degeneração Walleriana/patologia
18.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 3246, 2020 02 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32094400

RESUMO

Multidimensional correlation magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is an emerging imaging modality that is capable of disentangling highly heterogeneous and opaque systems according to chemical and physical interactions of water within them. Using this approach, the conventional three dimensional MR scalar images are replaced with spatially resolved multidimensional spectra. The ensuing abundance in microstructural and chemical information is a blessing that incorporates a real challenge: how does one distill and refine it into images while retaining its significant components? In this paper we introduce a general framework that preserves the spectral information from spatially resolved multidimensional data. Equal weight is given to significant spectral components at the single voxel level, resulting in a summarized image spectrum. This spectrum is then used to define spectral regions of interest that are utilized to reconstruct images of sub-voxel components. Using numerical simulations we first show that, contrary to the conventional approach, the proposed framework preserves spectral resolution, and in turn, sensitivity and specificity of the reconstructed images. The retained spectral resolution allows, for the first time, to observe an array of distinct [Formula: see text]-[Formula: see text]-[Formula: see text] components images of the human brain. The robustly generated images of sub-voxel components overcome the limited spatial resolution of MRI, thus advancing multidimensional correlation MRI to fulfilling its full potential.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Simulação por Computador , Humanos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Análise Numérica Assistida por Computador
19.
NMR Biomed ; 33(12): e4226, 2020 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31909516

RESUMO

Multidimensional correlation spectroscopy is emerging as a novel MRI modality that is well suited for microstructure and microdynamic imaging studies, especially of biological specimens. Conventional MRI methods only provide voxel-averaged and mostly macroscopically averaged information; these methods cannot disentangle intra-voxel heterogeneity on the basis of both water mobility and local chemical interactions. By correlating multiple MR contrast mechanisms and processing the data in an integrated manner, correlation spectroscopy is able to resolve the distribution of water populations according to their chemical and physical interactions with the environment. The use of a non-parametric, phenomenological representation of the multidimensional MR signal makes no assumptions about tissue structure, thereby allowing the study of microscopic structure and composition of complex heterogeneous biological systems. However, until recently, vast data requirements have confined these types of measurement to non-localized NMR applications and prevented them from being widely and successfully used in conjunction with imaging. Recent groundbreaking advancements have allowed this powerful NMR methodology to be migrated to MRI, initiating its emergence as a promising imaging approach. This review is not intended to cover the entire field of multidimensional MR; instead, it focuses on pioneering imaging applications and the challenges involved. In addition, the background and motivation that have led to multidimensional correlation MR development are discussed, along with the basic underlying mathematical concepts. The goal of the present work is to provide the reader with a fundamental understanding of the techniques developed and their potential benefits, and to provide guidance to help refine future applications of this technology.


Assuntos
Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Algoritmos , Animais , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Ratos , Pesquisa Translacional Biomédica , Nervo Trigêmeo/diagnóstico por imagem
20.
Elife ; 82019 12 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31829935

RESUMO

We develop magnetic resonance (MR) methods for real-time measurement of tissue microstructure and membrane permeability of live and fixed excised neonatal mouse spinal cords. Diffusion and exchange MR measurements are performed using the strong static gradient produced by a single-sided permanent magnet. Using tissue delipidation methods, we show that water diffusion is restricted solely by lipid membranes. Most of the diffusion signal can be assigned to water in tissue which is far from membranes. The remaining 25% can be assigned to water restricted on length scales of roughly a micron or less, near or within membrane structures at the cellular, organelle, and vesicle levels. Diffusion exchange spectroscopy measures water exchanging between membrane structures and free environments at 100 s-1.


Assuntos
Membrana Celular/ultraestrutura , Imagem de Difusão por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Membranas Intracelulares/ultraestrutura , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Medula Espinal/ultraestrutura , Potenciais de Ação , Animais , Animais Recém-Nascidos , Anisotropia , Células do Corno Anterior/fisiologia , Água Corporal , Detergentes/farmacologia , Deutério , Difusão , Imagem de Difusão por Ressonância Magnética/instrumentação , Desenho de Equipamento , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/instrumentação , Lipídeos de Membrana/química , Camundongos , Movimento (Física) , Octoxinol/farmacologia , Medula Espinal/efeitos dos fármacos
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