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Age-Related Tortuosity of Carotid and Vertebral Arteries: Quantitative Evaluation With MR Angiography
Sun, Zhe; Jiang, Dengrong; Liu, Peiying; Muccio, Marco; Li, Chenyang; Cao, Yan; Wisniewski, Thomas M; Lu, Hanzhang; Ge, Yulin
Background and Purpose/UNASSIGNED:The vascular tortuosity (VT) of the internal carotid artery (ICA), and vertebral artery (VA) can impact blood flow and neuronal function. However, few studies involved quantitative investigation of VT based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The main purpose of our study was to evaluate the age and gender effects on ICA and VA regarding the tortuosity and flow changes by applying automatic vessel segmentation, centerline tracking, and phase mapping on MR angiography. Methods/UNASSIGNED:A total of 247 subjects (86 males and 161 females) without neurological diseases participated in this study. All subjects obtained T1-weighted MRI, 3D time-of-flight MR angiography, and 2D phase-contrast (PC) MRI scans. To generate quantitative tortuosity metrics from TOF images, the vessel segmentation and centerline tracking were implemented based on Otsu thresholding and fast marching algorithms, respectively. Blood flow and velocity were measured using PC MRI. Among the 247 subjects, 144 subjects (≤ 60 years, 49 males/95 females) were categorized as the young group; 103 subjects (>60 years, 37 males/66 females) were categorized as the old group. Results/UNASSIGNED:< 0.001). The age was observed to be positively correlated with the VT metrics. Compared to the males, the females demonstrated higher geometric indices within VAs as well as faster age-related vascular profile changes. After adjusting age and gender as covariates, maximum blood velocity is negatively correlated with geometric measurements. No association was observed between blood flux and geometric measures. Conclusions/UNASSIGNED:Vascular auto-segmentation, centerline tracking, and phase mapping provide promising quantitative assessments of tortuosity and its effects on blood flow. The neck arteries demonstrate quantifiable and significant age-related morphological and hemodynamic alterations. Moreover, females showed more distinct vascular changes with age. Our work is built upon a comprehensive quantitative investigation of a large cohort of populations covering adult lifespan using MRI, the results can serve as reference ranges of each decade in the general population.
PMCID:9099009
PMID: 35572919
ISSN: 1664-2295
CID: 5284162
Upright versus supine MRI: effects of body position on craniocervical CSF flow
Muccio, Marco; Chu, David; Minkoff, Lawrence; Kulkarni, Neeraj; Damadian, Brianna; Damadian, Raymond V; Ge, Yulin
BACKGROUND:Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) circulation between the brain and spinal canal, as part of the glymphatic system, provides homeostatic support to brain functions and waste clearance. Recently, it has been observed that CSF flow is strongly driven by cardiovascular brain pulsation, and affected by body orientation. The advancement of MRI has allowed for non-invasive examination of the CSF hydrodynamic properties. However, very few studies have addressed their relationship with body position (e.g., upright versus supine). It is important to understand how CSF hydrodynamics are altered by body position change in a single cardiac phase and how cumulative long hours staying in either upright or supine position can affect craniocervical CSF flow. METHODS:In this study, we investigate the changes in CSF flow at the craniocervical region with flow-sensitive MRI when subjects are moved from upright to supine position. 30 healthy volunteers were imaged in upright and supine positions using an upright MRI. The cranio-caudal and caudo-cranial CSF flow, velocity and stroke volume were measured at the C2 spinal level over one cardiac cycle using phase contrast MRI. Statistical analysis was performed to identify differences in CSF flow properties between the two positions. RESULTS:CSF stroke volume per cardiac cycle, representing CSF volume oscillating in and out of the cranium, was ~ 57.6% greater in supine (p < 0.0001), due to a ~ 83.8% increase in caudo-cranial CSF peak velocity during diastole (p < 0.0001) and extended systolic phase duration when moving from upright (0.25 ± 0.05 s) to supine (0.34 ± 0.08 s; p < 0.0001). Extrapolation to a 24 h timeframe showed significantly larger total CSF volume exchanged at C2 with 10 h spent supine versus only 5 h (p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS:In summary, body position has significant effects on CSF flow in and out of the cranium, with more CSF oscillating in supine compared to upright position. Such difference was driven by an increased caudo-cranial diastolic CSF velocity and an increased systolic phase duration when moving from upright to supine position. Extrapolation to a 24 h timeframe suggests that more time spent in supine position increases total amount of CSF exchange, which may play a beneficial role in waste clearance in the brain.
PMCID:8710028
PMID: 34952607
ISSN: 2045-8118
CID: 5109212
SuperDTI: Ultrafast DTI and fiber tractography with deep learning
Li, Hongyu; Liang, Zifei; Zhang, Chaoyi; Liu, Ruiying; Li, Jing; Zhang, Weihong; Liang, Dong; Shen, Bowen; Zhang, Xiaoliang; Ge, Yulin; Zhang, Jiangyang; Ying, Leslie
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:To develop a deep learning-based reconstruction framework for ultrafast and robust diffusion tensor imaging and fiber tractography. METHODS:SuperDTI was developed to learn the nonlinear relationship between DWIs and the corresponding diffusion tensor parameter maps. It bypasses the tensor fitting procedure, which is highly susceptible to noises and motions in DWIs. The network was trained and tested using data sets from the Human Connectome Project and patients with ischemic stroke. Results from SuperDTI were compared against widely used methods for tensor parameter estimation and fiber tracking. RESULTS:Using training and testing data acquired using the same protocol and scanner, SuperDTI was shown to generate fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity maps, as well as fiber tractography, from as few as six raw DWIs, with a quantification error of less than 5% in all white-matter and gray-matter regions of interest. It was robust to noises and motions in the testing data. Furthermore, the network trained using healthy volunteer data showed no apparent reduction in lesion detectability when directly applied to stroke patient data. CONCLUSIONS:Our results demonstrate the feasibility of superfast DTI and fiber tractography using deep learning with as few as six DWIs directly, bypassing tensor fitting. Such a significant reduction in scan time may allow the inclusion of DTI into the clinical routine for many potential applications.
PMID: 34309073
ISSN: 1522-2594
CID: 5005812
Bilateral Distance Partition of Periventricular and Deep White Matter Hyperintensities: Performance of the Method in the Aging Brain
Chen, Jingyun; Mikheev, Artem V; Yu, Han; Gruen, Matthew D; Rusinek, Henry; Ge, Yulin
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:Periventricular and deep white matter hyperintensities (WMHs) in the elderly have been reported with distinctive roles in the progression of cognitive decline and dementia. However, the definition of these two subregions of WMHs is arbitrary and varies across studies. Here, we evaluate three partition methods for WMH subregions, including two widely used conventional methods (CV & D10) and one novel method based on bilateral distance (BD). MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:The three partition methods were assessed on the MRI scans of 60 subjects, with 20 normal control, 20 mild cognitive impairment, and 20 Alzheimer's disease (AD). Resulting WMH subregional volumes were (1) compared among different partition methods and subject groups, and (2) tested for clinical associations with cognition and dementia. Inter-rater, intrarater, and interscan reproducibility of WMHs volumes were tested on 12 randomly selected subjects from the 60. RESULTS:For all three partition methods, increased periventricular WMHs were found for AD subjects over normal control. For BD and D10, but not CV method, increased Periventricular WMHs were found for AD subjects over mild cognitive impairment. Significant correlations were found between PVWMHs and Mini-Mental State Examination, Montreal Cognitive Assessment, and Clinical Dementia Rating scores. Furthermore, PVWMHs under BD partition showed higher correlations than D10 and CV. High intrarater and interscan reproducibility (ICCA = 0.998 and 0.992 correspondingly) and substantial inter-rater reproducibility (ICCA = 0.886) were detected. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Different WMH partition methods showed comparable diagnostic abilities. The proposed BD method showed advantages in quantifying PVWMH over conventional CV and D10 methods, in terms of higher consistency, larger contrast, and higher diagnosis accuracy. Furthermore, the PVWMH under BD partition showed stronger clinical correlations than conventional methods.
PMID: 33127308
ISSN: 1878-4046
CID: 4770722
Noncontrast assessment of blood-brain barrier permeability to water: Shorter acquisition, test-retest reproducibility, and comparison with contrast-based method
Lin, Zixuan; Jiang, Dengrong; Liu, Dapeng; Li, Yang; Uh, Jinsoo; Hou, Xirui; Pillai, Jay J; Qin, Qin; Ge, Yulin; Lu, Hanzhang
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Assessment of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability without the need for contrast agent is desirable, and the ability to measure the permeability to small molecules such as water may further increase the sensitivity in detecting diseases. This study proposed a time-efficient, noncontrast method to measure BBB permeability to water, evaluated its test-retest reproducibility, and compared it with a contrast agent-based method. METHODS:A single-delay water extraction with phase-contrast arterial spin tagging (WEPCAST) method was devised in which spatial profile of the signal along the superior sagittal sinus was used to estimate bolus arrival time, and the WEPCAST signal at the corresponding location was used to compute water extraction fraction, which was combined with global cerebral blood flow to estimate BBB permeability surface area product to water. The reliability of WEPCAST sequence was examined in terms of intrasession, intersession, and inter-vendor (Philips [Ingenia, Best, the Netherlands] and Siemens [Prisma, Erlangen, Germany]) reproducibility. Finally, we compared this new technique to a contrast agent-based method. RESULTS:Single-delay WEPCAST reduced the scan duration from approximately 20 min to 5 min. Extract fraction values estimated from single-delay WEPCAST showed good consistency with the multi-delay method (R = 0.82, P = .004). Group-averaged permeability surface area product values were found to be 137.5 ± 9.3 mL/100 g/min. Intrasession, intersession, and inter-vendor coefficient of variation of the permeability surface area product values were 6.6 ± 4.5%, 6.9 ± 3.7%, and 8.9 ± 3.0%, respectively. Finally, permeability surface area product obtained from WEPCAST MRI showed a significant correlation with that from the contrast-based method (R = .73, P = .02). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Single-delay WEPCAST MRI can measure BBB permeability to water within 5 min with an intrasession, intersession, and inter-vendor test-retest reproducibility of 6% to 9%. This method may provide a useful marker of BBB breakdown in clinical studies.
PMID: 33559214
ISSN: 1522-2594
CID: 4807492
Performance Comparison of Compressed Sensing Algorithms for Accelerating T1Ï Mapping of Human Brain [Editorial]
Menon, Rajiv G; Zibetti, Marcelo V W; Jain, Rajan; Ge, Yulin; Regatte, Ravinder R
BACKGROUND:mapping is useful to quantify various neurologic disorders, but data are currently time-consuming to acquire. PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:mapping of the human brain with acceleration factors (AFs) of 2, 5, and 10. STUDY TYPE/METHODS:Retrospective. SUBJECTS/METHODS:imaging of the whole brain. FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE/UNASSIGNED:preparation module on a clinical 3T scanner. ASSESSMENT/RESULTS:estimation errors were assessed as a function of AF. STATISTICAL TESTS/UNASSIGNED:estimation errors, respectively. Linear regression plots, Bland-Altman plots, and Pearson correlation coefficients (CC) are shown. RESULTS:estimates. DATA CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:mapping of the brain. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE/METHODS:2. TECHNICAL EFFICACY STAGE/UNASSIGNED:1.
PMID: 33190362
ISSN: 1522-2586
CID: 4673552
Functional connectivity of the default mode, dorsal attention and fronto-parietal executive control networks in glial tumor patients
Tordjman, Mickael; Madelin, Guillaume; Gupta, Pradeep Kumar; Cordova, Christine; Kurz, Sylvia C; Orringer, Daniel; Golfinos, John; Kondziolka, Douglas; Ge, Yulin; Wang, Ruoyu Luie; Lazar, Mariana; Jain, Rajan
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rsfMRI) is an emerging tool to explore the functional connectivity of different brain regions. We aimed to assess the disruption of functional connectivity of the Default Mode Network (DMN), Dorsal Attention Network(DAN) and Fronto-Parietal Network (FPN) in patients with glial tumors. METHODS:rsfMRI data acquired on 3T-MR of treatment-naive glioma patients prospectively recruited (2015-2019) and matched controls from the 1000 functional-connectomes-project were analyzed using the CONN functional toolbox. Seed-Based Connectivity Analysis (SBCA) and Independent Component Analysis (ICA, with 10 to 100 components) were performed to study reliably the three networks of interest. RESULTS:). For the FPN, increased connectivity was noted in the precuneus, posterior cingulate gyrus, and frontal cortex. No difference in the connectivity of the networks of interest was demonstrated between low- and high-grade gliomas, as well as when stratified by their IDH1-R132H (isocitrate dehydrogenase) mutation status. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Altered functional connectivity is reliably found with SBCA and ICA in the DMN, DAN, and FPN in glioma patients, possibly explained by decreased connectivity between the cerebral hemispheres across the corpus callosum due to disruption of the connections.
PMID: 33528739
ISSN: 1573-7373
CID: 4789692
Editorial: Update on Vascular Contributions to Age-Related Neurodegenerative Diseases and Cognitive Impairment - Research of ISNVD 2020 Meeting [Editorial]
Ge, Yulin; Zivadinov, Robert; Wang, Meiyun; Charidimou, Andreas; Haacke, E Mark
PMCID:8632484
PMID: 34858320
ISSN: 1664-2295
CID: 5065862
An Overview of Venous Abnormalities Related to the Development of Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis
Haacke, E Mark; Ge, Yulin; Sethi, Sean K; Buch, Sagar; Zamboni, Paolo
The etiology of multiple sclerosis (MS) is currently understood to be autoimmune. However, there is a long history and growing evidence for disrupted vasculature and flow within the disease pathology. A broad review of the literature related to vascular effects in MS revealed a suggestive role for abnormal flow in the medullary vein system. Evidence for venous involvement in multiple sclerosis dates back to the early pathological work by Charcot and Bourneville, in the mid-nineteenth century. Pioneering work by Adams in the 1980s demonstrated vasculitis within the walls of veins and venules proximal to active MS lesions. And more recently, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been used to show manifestations of the central vein as a precursor to the development of new MS lesions, and high-resolution MRI using Ferumoxytol has been used to reveal the microvasculature that has previously only been demonstrated in cadaver brains. Both approaches may shed new light into the structural changes occurring in MS lesions. The material covered in this review shows that multiple pathophysiological events may occur sequentially, in parallel, or in a vicious circle which include: endothelial damage, venous collagenosis and fibrin deposition, loss of vessel compliance, venous hypertension, perfusion reduction followed by ischemia, medullary vein dilation and local vascular remodeling. We come to the conclusion that a potential source of MS lesions is due to locally disrupted flow which in turn leads to remodeling of the medullary veins followed by endothelial damage with the subsequent escape of glial cells, cytokines, etc. These ultimately lead to the cascade of inflammatory and demyelinating events which ensue in the course of the disease.
PMCID:8107266
PMID: 33981281
ISSN: 1664-2295
CID: 4898022
Revealing vascular abnormalities and measuring small vessel density in multiple sclerosis lesions using USPIO
Buch, Sagar; Subramanian, Karthikeyan; Jella, Pavan K; Chen, Yongsheng; Wu, Zhen; Shah, Kamran; Bernitsas, Evanthia; Ge, Yulin; Haacke, E Mark
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a progressive, inflammatory, neuro-degenerative disease of the central nervous system (CNS) characterized by a wide range of histopathological features including vascular abnormalities. In this study, an ultra-small superparamagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) contrast agent, Ferumoxytol, was administered to induce an increase in susceptibility for both arteries and veins to help better reveal the cerebral microvasculature. The purpose of this work was to examine the presence of vascular abnormalities and vascular density in MS lesions using high-resolution susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI). METHODS:Six subjects with relapsing remitting MS (RRMS, age = 47.3 ± 11.8 years with 3 females and 3 males) and fourteen age-matched healthy controls were scanned at 3 T with SWI acquired before and after the infusion of Ferumoxytol. Composite data was generated by registering the FLAIR data to the high resolution SWI data in order to highlight the vascular information in MS lesions. Both the central vein sign (CVS) and, a new measure, the multiple vessel sign (MVS) were identified, along with any vascular abnormalities, in the lesions on pre- and post-contrast SWI-FLAIR fusion data. The small vessel density within the periventricular normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) and the periventricular lesions were compared for all subjects. RESULTS:Averaged across two independent raters, a total of 530 lesions were identified across all patients. The total number of lesions with vascularity on pre- and post-contrast data were 287 and 488, respectively. The lesions with abnormal vascular behavior were broken up into following categories: small lesions appearing only at the vessel boundary; dilated vessels within the lesions; and developmental venous angiomas. These vessel abnormalities observed within lesions increased from 55 on pre-contrast data to 153 on post-contrast data. Finally, across all the patients, the periventricular lesional vessel density was significantly higher (p < 0.05) than that of the periventricular NAWM. CONCLUSIONS:By inducing a super-paramagnetic susceptibility in the blood using Ferumoxytol, the vascular abnormalities in the RRMS patients were revealed and small vessel densities were obtained. This approach has the potential to monitor the venous vasculature present in MS lesions, catalogue their characteristics and compare the vascular structures spatially to the presence of lesions. These enhanced vascular features may provide new insight into the pathophysiology of MS.
PMCID:7750444
PMID: 33338965
ISSN: 2213-1582
CID: 4762432