## Abstract Cerebral perfusion imaging using dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC) has been the subject of considerable research and shows promise for basic science and clinical use. In DSC, the MRI signals in brain tissue and feeding arteries are monitored dynamically in response to a bolus inject
Dynamic susceptibility contrast MRI with localized arterial input functions
โ Scribed by John J. Lee; G. Larry Bretthorst; Colin P. Derdeyn; William J. Powers; Tom O. Videen; Abraham Z. Snyder; Joanne Markham; Joshua S. Shimony
- Book ID
- 102954386
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 802 KB
- Volume
- 63
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Compared to goldโstandard measurements of cerebral perfusion with positron emission tomography using H~2~[^15^O] tracers, measurements with dynamic susceptibility contrast MR are more accessible, less expensive, and less invasive. However, existing methods for analyzing and interpreting data from dynamic susceptibility contrast MR have characteristic disadvantages that include sensitivity to incorrectly modeled delay and dispersion in a single, global arterial input function. We describe a model of tissue microcirculation derived from tracer kinetics that estimates for each voxel a unique, localized arterial input function. Parameters of the model were estimated using Bayesian probability theory and Markovโchain Monte Carlo, circumventing difficulties arising from numerical deconvolution. Applying the new method to imaging studies from a cohort of 14 patients with chronic, atherosclerotic, occlusive disease showed strong correlations between perfusion measured by dynamic susceptibility contrast MR with localized arterial input function and perfusion measured by quantitative positron emission tomography with H~2~[^15^O]. Regression to positron emission tomography measurements enabled conversion of dynamic susceptibility contrast MR to a physiologic scale. Regression analysis for localized arterial input function gave estimates of a scaling factor for quantitation that described perfusion accurately in patients with substantial variability in hemodynamic impairment. Magn Reson Med 63:1305โ1314, 2010. ยฉ 2010 WileyโLiss, Inc.
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