## Abstract Recently, a vascularβspaceβoccupancy (VASO) MRI technique was developed for quantitative assessment of cerebral blood volume (CBV). This method uses the __T__~1~βshortening effect of gadolinium diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (GdβDTPA) with imaging parameters chosen that null the pr
Effects of CBV, CBF, and blood-brain barrier permeability on accuracy of PASL and VASO measurement
β Scribed by Changwei W. Wu; Ho-Ling Liu; Jyh-Horng Chen; Yihong Yang
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 481 KB
- Volume
- 63
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
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β¦ Synopsis
Cerebral blood flow, cerebral blood volume (CBV), and water permeability through blood-brain barrier are important hemodynamic parameters in brain physiology. Pulsed arterial spin labeling and vascular-space occupancy techniques have been used to measure regional cerebral blood flow and CBV, respectively. However, these techniques generally ignore the effects of one hemodynamic parameter on the measurement of others. For instance, the influences of CBV changes on arterial spin labeling or the permeability effects on vascular-space occupancy typically were not accounted for in the quantification of blood flow or volume. In the current work, the biophysical effects of CBV on pulsed arterial spin labeling and permeability on vascular-space occupancy signals are evaluated using a general two-compartment model. The dependence of these effects on the T 1 at various field strengths is also assessed by simulations. Results indicate that CBV has negligible to small influences on pulsed arterial spin labeling signal (<6.6% at 3 T) and permeability effects are negligible on vascular-space occupancy signal (<0.1% at 3 T) under normal physiologic conditions. In addition, CBV effect on pulsed arterial spin labeling is further diminished at high field strengths, but residual blood contamination in vascular-space occupancy signal may be enhanced at high fields due to the reduced difference between extra-and intravascular T 1 values. Magn Reson Med 63: 601-608, 2010.
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## Abstract Two recently published methods of bloodβbrain barrier permeability measurement using GdβDTPA scanning are compared by authors representing each group. The physiological models are reconciled. Results from both groups agree. These show that the transfer constant (the permeability surface