Age and gender-related patterns of arterial transit time and cerebral blood flow in healthy adults

被引:0
|
作者
Zhang, Zongpai [1 ]
Riley, Elizabeth [2 ]
Chen, Shichun [1 ]
Zhao, Li [3 ]
Anderson, Adam K. [2 ]
Derosa, Eve [2 ]
Dai, Weiying [1 ]
机构
[1] SUNY Binghamton, Sch Comp, Binghamton, NY 13902 USA
[2] Cornell Univ, Dept Psychol, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
[3] Zhejiang Univ, Coll Biomed Engn & Instrument Sci, Hangzhou 310027, Zhejiang, Peoples R China
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Arterial spin labeling; Arterial transit time; Cerebral blood flow; Brain perfusion; Aging; SPIN-LABELING PERFUSION; MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT; ALZHEIMER-DISEASE; RESTING-STATE; BRAIN; MRI; REGIONS; NEURODEGENERATION; HYPOMETABOLISM; SENSITIVITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2025.121098
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Normal aging has been associated with increased arterial transit time (ATT) and reduced cerebral blood flow (CBF). However, age-related patterns of ATT and CBF and their relationship remain unclear. This is partly due to the lengthy scan times required for ATT measurements, which caused previous age-related CBF studies to not fully account for transit time. In this work, we aimed to elucidate age-related ATT and ATT-corrected CBF patterns. We examined 131 healthy subjects aged 19 to 82 years old using two pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling (PCASL) MRI scans: one to measure fast low-resolution ATT maps with five post-labeling delays and the other to measure high-resolution perfusion-weighted maps with a single post-labeling delay. Both ATT and perfusion-weighed maps were applied with vessel suppression. We found that ATT increases with age in the frontal, temporoparietal, and occipital regions, with a more pronounced elongation in males compared to females in the middle temporal gyrus. ATT-corrected CBF decreases with age in several brain regions, including the anterior cingulate, insula, posterior cingulate, angular, precuneus, supramarginal, frontal, parietal, superior and middle temporal, occipital, and cerebellar regions, while remaining stable in the inferior temporal and subcortical regions. In contrast, without ATT correction, we detected artifactual decreases in the inferior temporal and precentral regions. These findings suggest that ATT provides valuable and independent insights into microvascular deficits and should be incorporated into CBF measurements for studies involving aging populations.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Cerebral blood flow and arterial transit time responses to exercise training in older adults
    Feron, Jack
    Rahman, Foyzul
    Fosstveit, Sindre H.
    Joyce, Kelsey E.
    Gilani, Ahmed
    Lohne-Seiler, Hilde
    Berntsen, Sveinung
    Mullinger, Karen J.
    Segaert, Katrien
    Lucas, Samuel J. E.
    NEUROIMAGE, 2024, 303
  • [2] Comparing accuracy and reproducibility of sequential and Hadamard-encoded multidelay pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling for measuring cerebral blood flow and arterial transit time in healthy subjects: A simulation and in vivo study
    Guo, Jia
    Holdsworth, Samantha J.
    Fan, Audrey P.
    Lebel, Marc R.
    Zun, Zungho
    Shankaranarayanan, Ajit
    Zaharchuk, Greg
    JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 2018, 47 (04) : 1119 - 1132
  • [3] Mean arterial pressure change associated with cerebral blood flow in healthy older adults
    Deverdun, Jeremy
    Akbaraly, Tasnime N.
    Charroud, Celine
    Abdennour, Meriem
    Brickman, Adam M.
    Chemouny, Stephane
    Steffener, Jason
    Portet, Florence
    Bonafe, Alain
    Stern, Yaakov
    Ritchie, Karen
    Molino, Francois
    Le Bars, Emmanuelle
    de Champfleur, Nicolas Menjot
    NEUROBIOLOGY OF AGING, 2016, 46 : 49 - 57
  • [4] Age-related changes in regional cerebral blood flow among young to midlife adults
    Schultz, SK
    O'Leary, DS
    Ponto, LLB
    Watkins, GL
    Hichwa, RD
    Andreasen, NC
    NEUROREPORT, 1999, 10 (12) : 2493 - 2496
  • [5] Automated generation of cerebral blood flow and arterial transit time maps from multiple delay arterial spin-labeled MRI
    Luciw, Nicholas J.
    Shirzadi, Zahra
    Black, Sandra E.
    Goubran, Maged
    MacIntosh, Bradley J.
    MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE, 2022, 88 (01) : 406 - 417
  • [6] Parametric cerebral blood flow and arterial transit time mapping using a 3D convolutional neural network
    Kim, Donghoon
    Lipford, Megan E. E.
    He, Hongjian
    Ding, Qiuping
    Ivanovic, Vladimir
    Lockhart, Samuel N. N.
    Craft, Suzanne
    Whitlow, Christopher T. T.
    Jung, Youngkyoo
    MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE, 2023, 90 (02) : 583 - 595
  • [7] Arterial Transit Time-Based Multidelay Combination Strategy Improves Arterial Spin Labeling Cerebral Blood Flow Measurement Accuracy in Severe Steno-Occlusive Diseases
    Amemiya, Shiori
    Watanabe, Yusuke
    Takei, Naoyuki
    Ueyama, Tsuyoshi
    Miyawaki, Satoru
    Koizumi, Satoshi
    Kato, Seiji
    Takao, Hidemasa
    Abe, Osamu
    Saito, Nobuhito
    JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 2022, 55 (01) : 178 - 187
  • [8] Cerebral blood flow, transit time, and apparent diffusion coefficient in moyamoya disease before and after acetazolamide
    Federau, Christian
    Christensen, Soren
    Zun, Zungho
    Park, Sun-Won
    Ni, Wendy
    Moseley, Michael
    Zaharchuk, Greg
    NEURORADIOLOGY, 2017, 59 (01) : 5 - 12
  • [9] Dobutamine-induced alterations in internal carotid artery blood flow and cerebral blood flow in healthy adults
    Yu, Fengxia
    Liu, Dong
    Ma, Xia
    Liu, Yawen
    Cai, Linkun
    Zhao, Erwei
    Huang, Zixu
    Zhang, Zhe
    Zhang, Tingting
    Qiao, Penggang
    Zheng, Wei
    Guo, Chunyan
    Qian, Linxue
    Ren, Pengling
    Wang, Zhenchang
    BRAIN RESEARCH BULLETIN, 2025, 221
  • [10] AGE-RELATED-CHANGES IN REGULATION OF CEREBRAL BLOOD-FLOW
    ATKINSON, J
    LARTAUD, I
    CAPDEVILLEATKINSON, C
    PRESSE MEDICALE, 1992, 21 (26): : 1227 - 1230