The role of diffusion and perivascular spaces in dynamic susceptibility contrast MRI

We investigated the effects of brain tissue orientation, diffusion, and perivascular spaces on dynamic susceptibility contrast MRI. A 3D numerical model of a white matter voxel was created that consists of an isotropic capillary bed and anisotropic vessels that run in parallel with white matter trac...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inbioRxiv
Main Authors Doucette, Jonathan, Kames, Christian, Hernandez-Torres, Enedino, Traboulsee, Anthony, Rauscher, Alexander
Format Paper
LanguageEnglish
Published Cold Spring Harbor Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 19.04.2019
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Summary:We investigated the effects of brain tissue orientation, diffusion, and perivascular spaces on dynamic susceptibility contrast MRI. A 3D numerical model of a white matter voxel was created that consists of an isotropic capillary bed and anisotropic vessels that run in parallel with white matter tracts and are surrounded by perivascular spaces. The signal within the voxel was simulated by solving the Bloch-Torrey equation. Experimental perfusion data were acquired with a gradient echo dynamic susceptibility contrast scan. White matter fibre orientation was mapped with diffusion tensor imaging. Our numerical model of the contrast agent induced increase in R2*, as a function of tissue orientation, was fit to dynamic susceptibility contrast MRI data from thirteen subjects by minimizing the bias-corrected Akaike information criterion. White matter blood volume fraction in both the isotropic and the anisotropic vessels was determined as a free parameter, and results were analyzed as a function of diffusivity and perivascular space size. Total white matter blood volume was found to be 2.57%, with one third of the blood residing in blood vessels that run parallel with white matter tracts. Gradient echo dynamic susceptibility contrast MRI strongly depended on white matter tissue orientation and, according to the numerical simulations, this effect is amplified by diffusion and perivascular spaces.
DOI:10.1101/614008