Quantification of magnetization transfer rate and native T1 relaxation time of the brain: correlation with magnetization transfer ratio measurements in patients with multiple sclerosis

被引:0
|
作者
Spyros Karampekios
Nickolas Papanikolaou
Eufrosini Papadaki
Thomas Maris
Kai Uffman
Martha Spilioti
Andreas Plaitakis
Nicholas Gourtsoyiannis
机构
[1] University Hospital of Heraklion,Department of Radiology
[2] University of Crete,Department of Medical Physics
[3] University Hospital of Heraklion,Department of Neurology
[4] University of Crete,Department of Diagnostic Radiology
[5] University Hospital of Heraklion,undefined
[6] University of Crete,undefined
[7] University Hospital of Essen,undefined
来源
Neuroradiology | 2005年 / 47卷
关键词
Multiple Sclerosis; Multiple Sclerosis Patient; Flip Angle; Expand Disability Status Scale; Magnetization Transfer;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The purpose of this paper is to perform quantitative measurements of the magnetization transfer rate (Kfor) and native T1 relaxation time (T1free) in the brain tissue of normal individuals and patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) by means of multiple gradient echo acquisitions, and to correlate these measurements with the magnetization transfer ratio (MTR). Quantitative magnetization transfer imaging was performed in five normal volunteers and 12 patients with relapsing–remitting MS on a 1.5 T magnetic resonance (MR) scanner. The T1 relaxation time under magnetization transfer irradiation (T1sat) was calculated by means of fitting the signal intensity over the flip angle in several 3D spoiled gradient echo acquisitions (3°, 15°, 30°, and 60°), while a single acquisition without MT irradiation (flip angle of 3°) was utilized to calculate the MTR. The Kfor and T1free constants were quantified on a pixel-by-pixel basis and parametric maps were reconstructed. We performed 226 measurements of Kfor, T1free, and the MTR on normal white matter (NWM) of healthy volunteers (n=50), and normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) and pathological brain areas of MS patients (n=120 and 56, respectively). Correlation coefficients between Kfor–MTR, T1free–MTR, and T1free–Kfor were calculated. Lesions were classified, according to their characteristics on T1-weighted images, into isointense (compared to white matter), mildly hypointense (showing signal intensity lower than white matter and higher than gray matter), and severely hypointense (revealing signal intensity lower than gray matter). “Dirty” white matter (DWM) corresponded to areas with diffused high signal, as identified on T2-weighted images. Strong correlation coefficients were obtained between MTR and Kfor for all lesions studied (r2=0.9, p<0.0001), for mildly hypointense plaques (r2=0.82, p<0.0001), and for DWM (r2=0.78, p=0.0007). In contrast, comparison between MTR and T1free values yielded rather low correlation coefficients for all groups assessed. In severely hypointense lesions, an excellent correlation was found between Kfor and T1free measurements (r2=0.98, p<0.0001). Strong correlations between Kfor and T1free were found for the rest of the subgroups, except for the NAWM, in which a moderate correlation was obtained (r2=0.5, p<0.0001). We conclude that Kfor and T1free measurements are feasible and may improve our understanding of the pathological brain changes that occur in MS patients.
引用
收藏
页码:189 / 196
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] CHARACTERIZATION OF MULTIPLE-SCLEROSIS PLAQUES WITH T1-WEIGHTED MR AND QUANTITATIVE MAGNETIZATION-TRANSFER
    LOEVNER, LA
    GROSSMAN, RI
    MCGOWAN, JC
    RAMER, KN
    COHEN, JA
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NEURORADIOLOGY, 1995, 16 (07) : 1473 - 1479
  • [42] Grey matter magnetization transfer ratio independently correlates with neurological deficit in secondary progressive multiple sclerosis
    T. Hayton
    J. Furby
    K. J. Smith
    D. R. Altmann
    R. Brenner
    J. Chataway
    R. A. C. Hughes
    K. Hunter
    D. J. Tozer
    D. H. Miller
    R. Kapoor
    Journal of Neurology, 2009, 256 : 427 - 435
  • [43] Investigation of magnetization transfer ratio-derived pial and subpial abnormalities in the multiple sclerosis spinal cord
    Kearney, Hugh
    Yiannakas, Marios C.
    Samson, Rebecca S.
    Wheeler-Kingshott, Claudia A. M.
    Ciccarelli, Olga
    Miller, David H.
    BRAIN, 2014, 137 : 2456 - 2468
  • [44] Hippocampal Magnetization Transfer Ratio at 3T: Validation of Automated Postprocessing and Comparison of Quantification Metrics
    Sidharthan, Shawn
    Hutten, Ryan
    Glielmi, Christopher
    Du, Hongyan
    Malone, Fiona
    Ragin, Ann B.
    Edelman, Robert R.
    Wu, Ying
    JOURNAL OF NEUROIMAGING, 2013, 23 (03) : 484 - 490
  • [45] Grey matter magnetization transfer ratio independently correlates with neurological deficit in secondary progressive multiple sclerosis
    Hayton, T.
    Furby, J.
    Smith, K. J.
    Altmann, D. R.
    Brenner, R.
    Chataway, J.
    Hughes, R. A. C.
    Hunter, K.
    Tozer, D. J.
    Miller, D. H.
    Kapoor, R.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, 2009, 256 (03) : 427 - 435
  • [46] Delineation of cortical pathology in multiple sclerosis using multi-surface magnetization transfer ratio imaging
    Rudko, David A.
    Derakhshan, Mishkin
    Maranzano, Josefina
    Nakamura, Kunio
    Arnold, Douglas L.
    Narayanan, Sridar
    NEUROIMAGE-CLINICAL, 2016, 12 : 858 - 868
  • [47] Ethanol in human brain by magnetic resonance spectroscopy: Correlation with blood and breath levels, relaxation, and magnetization transfer
    Fein, G
    Meyerhoff, DJ
    ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 2000, 24 (08) : 1227 - 1235
  • [48] Magnetization transfer ratio measurement in multiple sclerosis normal-appearing brain tissue: limited differences with controls but relationships with clinical and MR measures of disease
    Vrenken, H.
    Pouwels, P. J. W.
    Ropele, S.
    Knol, D. L.
    Geurts, J. J. G.
    Polman, C. H.
    Barkhof, F.
    Castelijns, J. A.
    MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS, 2007, 13 (06): : 708 - 716
  • [49] Contribution of cervical cord MRI and brain magnetization transfer imaging to the assessment of individual patients with multiple sclerosis:: a preliminary study
    Rovaris, M
    Holtmannspötter, M
    Rocca, MA
    Iannucci, G
    Codella, M
    Viti, B
    Campi, A
    Comi, G
    Yousry, TA
    Filippi, M
    MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS JOURNAL, 2002, 8 (01) : 52 - 58
  • [50] Multislice T1 relaxation time measurements in the brain using IR-EPI:: Reproducibility, normal values, and histogram analysis in patients with multiple sclerosis
    van Walderveen, MAA
    van Schijndel, RA
    Pouwels, PJW
    Polman, CH
    Barkhof, F
    JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 2003, 18 (06) : 656 - 664