DSC MRI in the human brain using deoxyhemoglobin and gadolinium-Simulations and validations at 3T

Dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC) MRI allows clinicians to determine perfusion parameters in the brain, such as cerebral blood flow, cerebral blood volume, and mean transit time. To enable quantification, susceptibility changes can be induced using gadolinium (Gd) or deoxyhemoglobin (dOHb), the...

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Published inFrontiers in neuroimaging Vol. 2; p. 1048652
Main Authors Schulman, Jacob Benjamin, Sayin, Ece Su, Manalac, Angelica, Poublanc, Julien, Sobczyk, Olivia, Duffin, James, Fisher, Joseph A, Mikulis, David, Uludağ, Kâmil
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 20.02.2023
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Summary:Dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC) MRI allows clinicians to determine perfusion parameters in the brain, such as cerebral blood flow, cerebral blood volume, and mean transit time. To enable quantification, susceptibility changes can be induced using gadolinium (Gd) or deoxyhemoglobin (dOHb), the latter just recently introduced as a contrast agent in DSC. Previous investigations found that experimental parameters and analysis choices, such as the susceptibility amplitude and partial volume, affect perfusion quantification. However, the accuracy and precision of DSC MRI has not been systematically investigated, particularly in the lower susceptibility range. In this study, we compared perfusion values determined using Gd with values determined using a contrast agent with a lower susceptibility-dOHb-under different physiological conditions, such as varying the baseline blood oxygenation and/or magnitude of hypoxic bolus, by utilizing numerical simulations and conducting experiments on healthy subjects at 3T. The simulation framework we developed for DSC incorporates MRI signal contributions from intravascular and extravascular proton spins in arterial, venous, and cerebral tissue voxels. This framework allowed us to model the MRI signal in response to both Gd and dOHb. We found, both in the experimental results and simulations, that a reduced intravascular volume of the selected arterial voxel, reduced baseline oxygen saturation, greater susceptibility of applied contrast agent (Gd vs. dOHb), and/or larger magnitude of applied hypoxic bolus reduces the overestimation and increases precision of cerebral blood volume and flow. As well, we found that normalizing tissue to venous rather than arterial signal increases the accuracy of perfusion quantification across experimental paradigms. Furthermore, we found that shortening the bolus duration increases the accuracy and reduces the calculated values of mean transit time. In summary, we experimentally uncovered an array of perfusion quantification dependencies, which agreed with the simulation framework predictions, using a wider range of susceptibility values than previously investigated. We argue for caution when comparing absolute and relative perfusion values within and across subjects obtained from a standard DSC MRI analysis, particularly when employing different experimental paradigms and contrast agents.
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Edited by: Alberto L. Vazquez, University of Pittsburgh, United States
Reviewed by: Valur T. Olafsson, Northeastern University, United States; Linda Knutsson, Kennedy Krieger Institute, United States
This article was submitted to Brain Imaging Methods, a section of the journal Frontiers in Neuroimaging
ISSN:2813-1193
2813-1193
DOI:10.3389/fnimg.2023.1048652