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Muscle fiber strain rates in the lower leg during ankle dorsi-/plantarflexion exercise

Hooijmans, Melissa T; Veeger, Thom T J; Mazzoli, Valentina; van Assen, Hans C; de Groot, Jurriaan H; Gottwald, Lukas M; Nederveen, Aart J; Strijkers, Gustav J; Kan, Hermien E
Static quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides readouts of structural changes in diseased muscle, but current approaches lack the ability to fully explain the loss of contractile function. Muscle contractile function can be assessed using various techniques including phase-contrast MRI (PC-MRI), where strain rates are quantified. However, current two-dimensional implementations are limited in capturing the complex motion of contracting muscle in the context of its three-dimensional (3D) fiber architecture. The MR acquisitions (chemical shift-encoded water-fat separation scan, spin echo-echoplanar imaging with diffusion weighting, and two time-resolved 3D PC-MRI) wereperformed at 3 T. PC-MRI acquisitions and performed with and without load at 7.5% of the maximum voluntary dorsiflexion contraction force. Acquisitions (3 T, chemical shift-encoded water-fat separation scan, spin echo-echo planar imaging with diffusion weighting, and two time-resolved 3D PC-MRI) were performed with and without load at 7.5% of the maximum voluntary dorsiflexion contraction force. Strain rates and diffusion tensors were calculated and combined to obtain strain rates along and perpendicular to the muscle fibers in seven lower leg muscles during the dynamic dorsi-/plantarflexion movement cycle. To evaluate strain rates along the proximodistal muscle axis, muscles were divided into five equal segments. t-tests were used to test if cyclic strain rate patterns (amplitude > 0) were present along and perpendicular to the muscle fibers. The effects of proximal-distal location and load were evaluated using repeated measures ANOVAs. Cyclic temporal strain rate patterns along and perpendicular to the fiber were found in all muscles involved in dorsi-/plantarflexion movement (p < 0.0017). Strain rates along and perpendicular to the fiber were heterogeneously distributed over the length of most muscles (p < 0.003). Additional loading reduced strain rates of the extensor digitorum longus and gastrocnemius lateralis muscle (p < 0.001). In conclusion, the lower leg muscles involved in cyclic dorsi-/plantarflexion exercise showed cyclic fiber strain rate patterns with amplitudes that varied between muscles and between the proximodistal segments within the majority of muscles.
PMID: 38062865
ISSN: 1099-1492
CID: 5579312

Advanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Molecular Imaging of the Painful Knee

Mostert, Jacob M; Dur, Niels B J; Li, Xiufeng; Ellermann, Jutta M; Hemke, Robert; Hales, Laurel; Mazzoli, Valentina; Kogan, Feliks; Griffith, James F; Oei, Edwin H G; van der Heijden, Rianne A
Chronic knee pain is a common condition. Causes of knee pain include trauma, inflammation, and degeneration, but in many patients the pathophysiology remains unknown. Recent developments in advanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques and molecular imaging facilitate more in-depth research focused on the pathophysiology of chronic musculoskeletal pain and more specifically inflammation. The forthcoming new insights can help develop better targeted treatment, and some imaging techniques may even serve as imaging biomarkers for predicting and assessing treatment response in the future. This review highlights the latest developments in perfusion MRI, diffusion MRI, and molecular imaging with positron emission tomography/MRI and their application in the painful knee. The primary focus is synovial inflammation, also known as synovitis. Bone perfusion and bone metabolism are also addressed.
PMCID:10629992
PMID: 37935208
ISSN: 1098-898x
CID: 5579302

Compositional and Functional MRI of Skeletal Muscle: A Review

Hooijmans, Melissa T; Schlaffke, Lara; Bolsterlee, Bart; Schlaeger, Sarah; Marty, Benjamin; Mazzoli, Valentina
Due to its exceptional sensitivity to soft tissues, MRI has been extensively utilized to assess anatomical muscle parameters such as muscle volume and cross-sectional area. Quantitative Magnetic Resonance Imaging (qMRI) adds to the capabilities of MRI, by providing information on muscle composition such as fat content, water content, microstructure, hypertrophy, atrophy, as well as muscle architecture. In addition to compositional changes, qMRI can also be used to assess function for example by measuring muscle quality or through characterization of muscle deformation during passive lengthening/shortening and active contractions. The overall aim of this review is to provide an updated overview of qMRI techniques that can quantitatively evaluate muscle structure and composition, provide insights into the underlying biological basis of the qMRI signal, and illustrate how qMRI biomarkers of muscle health relate to function in healthy and diseased/injured muscles. While some applications still require systematic clinical validation, qMRI is now established as a comprehensive technique, that can be used to characterize a wide variety of structural and compositional changes in healthy and diseased skeletal muscle. Taken together, multiparametric muscle MRI holds great potential in the diagnosis and monitoring of muscle conditions in research and clinical applications. EVIDENCE LEVEL: 5 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 2.
PMID: 37929681
ISSN: 1522-2586
CID: 5579292

[Formula: see text] Field inhomogeneity correction for qDESS [Formula: see text] mapping: application to rapid bilateral knee imaging

Barbieri, Marco; Watkins, Lauren E; Mazzoli, Valentina; Desai, Arjun D; Rubin, Elka; Schmidt, Andrew; Gold, Garry Evan; Hargreaves, Brian Andrew; Chaudhari, Akshay Sanjay; Kogan, Feliks
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:[Formula: see text] mapping is a powerful tool for studying osteoarthritis (OA) changes and bilateral imaging may be useful in investigating the role of between-knee asymmetry in OA onset and progression. The quantitative double-echo in steady-state (qDESS) can provide fast simultaneous bilateral knee [Formula: see text] and high-resolution morphometry for cartilage and meniscus. The qDESS uses an analytical signal model to compute [Formula: see text] relaxometry maps, which require knowledge of the flip angle (FA). In the presence of [Formula: see text] inhomogeneities, inconsistencies between the nominal and actual FA can affect the accuracy of [Formula: see text] measurements. We propose a pixel-wise [Formula: see text] correction method for qDESS [Formula: see text] mapping exploiting an auxiliary [Formula: see text] map to compute the actual FA used in the model. METHODS:The technique was validated in a phantom and in vivo with simultaneous bilateral knee imaging. [Formula: see text] measurements of femoral cartilage (FC) of both knees of six healthy participants were repeated longitudinally to investigate the association between [Formula: see text] variation and [Formula: see text]. RESULTS:The results showed that applying the [Formula: see text] correction mitigated [Formula: see text] variations that were driven by [Formula: see text] inhomogeneities. Specifically, [Formula: see text] left-right symmetry increased following the [Formula: see text] correction ([Formula: see text] = 0.74 > [Formula: see text] = 0.69). Without the [Formula: see text] correction, [Formula: see text] values showed a linear dependence with [Formula: see text]. The linear coefficient decreased using the [Formula: see text] correction (from 24.3 ± 1.6 ms to 4.1 ± 1.8) and the correlation was not statistically significant after the application of the Bonferroni correction (p value > 0.01). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The study showed that [Formula: see text] correction could mitigate variations driven by the sensitivity of the qDESS [Formula: see text] mapping method to [Formula: see text], therefore, increasing the sensitivity to detect real biological changes. The proposed method may improve the robustness of bilateral qDESS [Formula: see text] mapping, allowing for an accurate and more efficient evaluation of OA pathways and pathophysiology through longitudinal and cross-sectional studies.
PMCID:10524110
PMID: 37142852
ISSN: 1352-8661
CID: 5599782

Multishot Diffusion-Weighted MRI of the Breasts in the Supine vs. Prone Position

Moran, Catherine J; Middione, Matthew J; Mazzoli, Valentina; McKay-Nault, Jessica A; Guidon, Arnaud; Waheed, Uzma; Rosen, Eric L; Poplack, Steven P; Rosenberg, Jarrett; Ennis, Daniel B; Hargreaves, Brian A; Daniel, Bruce L
BACKGROUND:Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) may allow for breast cancer screening MRI without a contrast injection. Multishot methods improve prone DWI of the breasts but face different challenges in the supine position. PURPOSE:To establish a multishot DWI (msDWI) protocol for supine breast MRI and to evaluate the performance of supine vs. prone msDWI. STUDY TYPE:Prospective. POPULATION:Protocol optimization: 10 healthy women (ages 22-56), supine vs. prone: 24 healthy women (ages 22-62) and five women (ages 29-61) with breast tumors. FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE:3-T, protocol optimization msDWI: free-breathing (FB) 2-shots, FB 4-shots, respiratory-triggered (RT) 2-shots, RT 4-shots, supine vs. prone: RT 4-shot msDWI, T2-weighted fast-spin echo. ASSESSMENT:Protocol optimization and supine vs. prone: three observers performed an image quality assessment of sharpness, aliasing, distortion (vs. T2), perceived SNR, and overall image quality (scale of 1-5). Apparent diffusion coefficients (ADCs) in fibroglandular tissue (FGT) and breast tumors were measured. STATISTICAL TESTS:). P value <0.05 was considered statistically significant. RESULTS: = 0.92). DATA CONCLUSION:Based on image quality, supine msDWI outperformed prone msDWI. Lesion ADCs were highly correlated between the two positions, while FGT ADCs were higher in the supine position. EVIDENCE LEVEL:2. TECHNICAL EFFICACY:Stage 1.
PMCID:10310889
PMID: 36583628
ISSN: 1522-2586
CID: 5599372

Muscle Steatosis and Fibrosis in Older Adults, From the AJR Special Series on Imaging of Fibrosis

Lenchik, Leon; Mazzoli, Valentina; Cawthon, Peggy M; Hepple, Russell T; Boutin, Robert D
The purpose of this article is to review steatosis and fibrosis of skeletal muscle, focusing on older adults. Although CT, MRI, and ultrasound are commonly used to image skeletal muscle and provide diagnoses for a variety of medical conditions, quantitative assessment of muscle steatosis and fibrosis is uncommon. This review provides radiologists with a broad perspective on muscle steatosis and fibrosis in older adults by considering their public health impact, biologic mechanisms, and evaluation using CT, MRI, and ultrasound. Promising directions in clinical research that employ artificial intelligence algorithms and the imaging assessment of biologic age are also reviewed. The presented imaging methods hold promise for improving the evaluation of common conditions affecting older adults including sarcopenia, frailty, and cachexia.
PMID: 37610777
ISSN: 1546-3141
CID: 5598532

Generalizability of Deep Learning Segmentation Algorithms for Automated Assessment of Cartilage Morphology and MRI Relaxometry

Schmidt, Andrew M; Desai, Arjun D; Watkins, Lauren E; Crowder, Hollis A; Black, Marianne S; Mazzoli, Valentina; Rubin, Elka B; Lu, Quin; MacKay, James W; Boutin, Robert D; Kogan, Feliks; Gold, Garry E; Hargreaves, Brian A; Chaudhari, Akshay S
BACKGROUND:Deep learning (DL)-based automatic segmentation models can expedite manual segmentation yet require resource-intensive fine-tuning before deployment on new datasets. The generalizability of DL methods to new datasets without fine-tuning is not well characterized. PURPOSE:Evaluate the generalizability of DL-based models by deploying pretrained models on independent datasets varying by MR scanner, acquisition parameters, and subject population. STUDY TYPE:Retrospective based on prospectively acquired data. POPULATION:Overall test dataset: 59 subjects (26 females); Study 1: 5 healthy subjects (zero females), Study 2: 8 healthy subjects (eight females), Study 3: 10 subjects with osteoarthritis (eight females), Study 4: 36 subjects with various knee pathology (10 females). FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE:A 3-T, quantitative double-echo steady state (qDESS). ASSESSMENT:Four annotators manually segmented knee cartilage. Each reader segmented one of four qDESS datasets in the test dataset. Two DL models, one trained on qDESS data and another on Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI)-DESS data, were assessed. Manual and automatic segmentations were compared by quantifying variations in segmentation accuracy, volume, and T2 relaxation times for superficial and deep cartilage. STATISTICAL TESTS:Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) for segmentation accuracy. Lin's concordance correlation coefficient (CCC), Wilcoxon rank-sum tests, root-mean-squared error-coefficient-of-variation to quantify manual vs. automatic T2 and volume variations. Bland-Altman plots for manual vs. automatic T2 agreement. A P value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. RESULTS:DSCs for the qDESS-trained model, 0.79-0.93, were higher than those for the OAI-DESS-trained model, 0.59-0.79. T2 and volume CCCs for the qDESS-trained model, 0.75-0.98 and 0.47-0.95, were higher than respective CCCs for the OAI-DESS-trained model, 0.35-0.90 and 0.13-0.84. Bland-Altman 95% limits of agreement for superficial and deep cartilage T2 were lower for the qDESS-trained model, ±2.4 msec and ±4.0 msec, than the OAI-DESS-trained model, ±4.4 msec and ±5.2 msec. DATA CONCLUSION:The qDESS-trained model may generalize well to independent qDESS datasets regardless of MR scanner, acquisition parameters, and subject population. EVIDENCE LEVEL:1 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 1.
PMID: 35852498
ISSN: 1522-2586
CID: 5579252

[18F]Sodium fluoride PET-MRI detects increased metabolic bone response to whole-joint loading stress in osteoarthritic knees

Watkins, L E; Haddock, B; MacKay, J W; Baker, J; Uhlrich, S D; Mazzoli, V; Gold, G E; Kogan, F
OBJECTIVE:F]NaF PET-MRI was used to study the acute joint response to exercise in OA knees, and compare relationships between regions of increased uptake after loading and structural OA progression two years later. METHODS:> 3) were identified and the presence of structural MRI features was noted. Five participants returned two years later to assess structural change on MRI. RESULTS:P < 0.001) that differed by bone region. CONCLUSION:There were regional differences in the acute bone metabolic response to exercise and areas of focally large changes in the metabolic bone response that might be representative of whole-joint dysfunction.
PMCID:9922526
PMID: 36031138
ISSN: 1522-9653
CID: 5579272

Gadolinium-free assessment of synovitis using diffusion tensor imaging

Sandford, Halston J C; MacKay, James W; Watkins, Lauren E; Gold, Garry E; Kogan, Feliks; Mazzoli, Valentina
The dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE)-MRI parameter Ktrans can quantify the intensity of synovial inflammation (synovitis) in knees with osteoarthritis (OA), but requires the use of gadolinium-based contrast agent (GBCA). Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) measures the diffusion of water molecules with parameters mean diffusivity (MD) and fractional anisotropy (FA), and has been proposed as a method to detect synovial inflammation without the use of GBCA. The purpose of this study is to (1) determine the ability of DTI to quantify the intensity of synovitis in OA by comparing MD and FA with our imaging gold standard Ktrans within the synovium and (2) compare DTI and DCE-MRI measures with the semi-quantitative grading of OA severity with the Kellgren-Lawrence (KL) and MRI Osteoarthritis Knee Score (MOAKS) systems, in order to assess the relationship between synovitis intensity and OA severity. Within the synovium, MD showed a significant positive correlation with Ktrans (r = 0.79, p < 0.001), while FA showed a significant negative correlation with Ktrans (r = -0.72, p = 0.0026). These results show that DTI is able to quantify the intensity of synovitis within the whole synovium without the use of exogenous contrast agent. Additionally, MD, FA, and Ktrans values did not vary significantly when knees were separated by KL grade (p = 0.15, p = 0.32, p = 0.41, respectively), while MD (r = 0.60, p = 0.018) and Ktrans (r = 0.62, p = 0.013) had a significant positive correlation and FA (r = -0.53, p = 0.043) had a negative correlation with MOAKS. These comparisons indicate that quantitative measures of the intensity of synovitis may provide information in addition to morphological assessment to evaluate OA severity. Using DTI to quantify the intensity of synovitis without GBCA may be helpful to facilitate a broader clinical assessment of the severity of OA.
PMCID:8688337
PMID: 34549476
ISSN: 1099-1492
CID: 5579212

A diffusion tensor-based method facilitating volumetric assessment of fiber orientations in skeletal muscle

Secondulfo, Laura; Hooijmans, Melissa T; Suskens, Joep J; Mazzoli, Valentina; Maas, Mario; Tol, Johannes L; Nederveen, Aart J; Strijkers, Gustav J
BACKGROUND:The purpose of this study was to develop a DTI-based method to quantitatively assess fiber angles and changes therein in leg muscles in order to facilitate longitudinal studies on muscle fiber architectural adaptations in healthy subjects. METHODS:The upper legs of five volunteers were scanned twice on the same day. The right lower legs of five volunteers were scanned twice with the ankle in three positions, i.e. -15° dorsiflexion, 0° neutral position, and 30° plantarflexion. The MRI protocols consisted of a noise scan, a 3-point mDixon scan and a DTI scan. Fiber-angle color maps were generated for four muscles in the upper legs and two muscles in the lower leg. Voxel-wise fiber angles (θ) were calculated from the angle between the principal eigenvector of the diffusion tensor and a reference line defined between the origo and insertion points of each muscle. Bland-Altman analysis, intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), coefficient of variation (CV%), minimal detectable change (MDC), standard error (SE) and Friedman test were used for assessing the feasibility of this method and in order to have an indication of the repeatability and the sensitivity. RESULTS:Bland-Altman analysis showed good repeatability (CV%<10 and 0.7≤ICC≤0.9) with exception of the Tibialis Anterior (TA) muscle in dorsiflexion position(CV%: 12.2) and the Semitendinosus (ST) muscle (left leg) (CV%: 11.4). The best repeatability metrics were found for the SOL muscle in neutral position (CV%: 2.6). Changes in average θ in TA and SOL with ankle positions were observed in accordance with expected agonist and antagonist functions of both muscles. For example, for the anterior left compartment the change in fiber angle Δθ with respect to the neutral position Δθ = -1.6° ± 0.8° and 2.2° ± 2.8° (p = 0.008), for dorsiflexion and plantarflexion, respectively. CONCLUSION:Our method facilitates fast inspection and quantification of muscle fiber angles in the lower and upper leg muscles in rest and detection of changes in lower-leg muscle fiber angles with varying ankle angles.
PMCID:8794095
PMID: 35085267
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 5579232