Single-coil arterial spin-tagging for estimating cerebral blood flow as viewed from the capillary: Relative contributions of intra- and extravascular signal
✍ Scribed by James R. Ewing; Yue Cao; Joseph Fenstermacher
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 260 KB
- Volume
- 46
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
- DOI
- 10.1002/mrm.1215
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The single‐capillary model was applied to the exchange microvessels for water in the cerebral parenchyma and used to calculate blood‐to‐brain flux of water; the theory of the steady‐state arterial spin‐tagging (AST) technique for estimating cerebral blood flow (CBF) was revised to incorporate the presence of both extravascular (tissue) and capillary signal. A crucial element of the single‐coil AST experiment is that magnetization transfer (MT) shortens the effective T~1~ of the extravascular water, making it one‐quarter that of the T~1~ of capillary blood. Furthermore, the mean capillary transit time is on the order of the T~1~ of the extravascular water. The single‐coil AST experiment is distinguished from other methods which use water as an indicator for measurement of CBF in that the (flow‐dependent) populations of inverted protons in the intra‐ and extravascular compartments can be nearly equal for normal physiological conditions. The following questions are considered: Is single‐coil AST contrast linear in resting CBF? Is contrast in the single‐coil AST technique likely to be linear under changes in CBF in normal tissue? Is the contrast likely to be linear in such common pathologies as stroke and cerebral tumor? We demonstrate that, if the population of inverted protons in the microvessels is included in the experiment, the voxel population of inverted protons will be approximately linear with flow across a broad range of flow values. We predict that the single‐coil AST experiment will systematically overestimate resting CBF for flows in the normal range, that changes in CBF in normal tissue will produce an approximately linear response in AST measurement, and, finally, we predict the operating characteristics of the measurement in common cerebral pathologies. Magn Reson Med 46:465–475, 2001. © 2001 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.