Blood–brain barrier water exchange measurements using contrast‐enhanced ASL

Author:

Powell Elizabeth1ORCID,Dickie Ben R.23ORCID,Ohene Yolanda34,Maskery Mark5,Parker Geoff J. M.167ORCID,Parkes Laura M.34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Medical Image Computing, Department of Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering University College London London UK

2. Division of Informatics, Imaging and Data Sciences, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health University of Manchester Manchester UK

3. Geoffrey Jefferson Brain Research Centre University of Manchester, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre Manchester UK

4. Division of Psychology, Communication and Human Neuroscience, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health University of Manchester Manchester UK

5. Department of Neurology Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Preston UK

6. Queen Square MS Centre, Institute of Neurology University College London London UK

7. Bioxydyn Limited Manchester United Kingdom

Abstract

A technique for quantifying regional blood–brain barrier (BBB) water exchange rates using contrast‐enhanced arterial spin labelling (CE‐ASL) is presented and evaluated in simulations and in vivo. The two‐compartment ASL model describes the water exchange rate from blood to tissue, , but to estimate in practice it is necessary to separate the intra‐ and extravascular signals. This is challenging in standard ASL data owing to the small difference in values. Here, a gadolinium‐based contrast agent is used to increase this difference and enable the signal components to be disentangled. The optimal post‐contrast blood ( ) at 3 T was determined in a sensitivity analysis, and the accuracy and precision of the method quantified using Monte Carlo simulations. Proof‐of‐concept data were acquired in six healthy volunteers (five female, age range 24–46 years). The sensitivity analysis identified the optimal at 3 T as 0.8 s. Simulations showed that could be estimated in individual cortical regions with a relative error % and coefficient of variation %; however, a high dependence on blood was also observed. In volunteer data, mean parameter values in grey matter were: arterial transit time  s, cerebral blood flow  mL blood/min/100 mL tissue and water exchange rate s−1. CE‐ASL can provide regional BBB water exchange rate estimates; however, the clinical utility of the technique is dependent on the achievable accuracy of measured values.

Funder

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Spectroscopy,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Molecular Medicine

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