Characterization of the orientation dependence of magnetization transfer measures in single and crossing‐fiber white matter

Author:

Karan Philippe1ORCID,Edde Manon1,Gilbert Guillaume2,Barakovic Muhamed3,Magon Stefano3,Descoteaux Maxime1

Affiliation:

1. Sherbrooke Connectivity Imaging Laboratory (SCIL) Université de Sherbrooke Sherbrooke Canada

2. MR Clinical Science Philips Healthcare Canada Mississauga Canada

3. Pharma Research and Early Development Neuroscience and Rare Diseases Roche Innovation Center Basel Basel Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractPurposeTo fully characterize the orientation dependence of magnetization transfer (MT) and inhomogeneous MT (ihMT) measures in the whole white matter (WM), for both single‐fiber and crossing‐fiber voxels.MethodsA characterization method was developed using the fiber orientation obtained from diffusion MRI (dMRI) with diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and constrained spherical deconvolution. This allowed for characterization of the orientation dependence of measures in all of WM, regardless of the number of fiber orientation in a voxel. Furthermore, the orientation dependence inside 31 different WM bundles was characterized to evaluate the homogeneity of the effect. Variation of the results within and between‐subject was assessed from a 12‐subject dataset.ResultsPrevious results for single‐fiber voxels were reproduced and a novel characterization was produced in voxels of crossing fibers, which seems to follow trends consistent with single‐fiber results. Heterogeneity of the orientation dependence across bundles was observed, but homogeneity within similar bundles was also highlighted. Differences in behavior between MT and ihMT measures, as well as the ratio and saturation versions of these, were noted.ConclusionOrientation dependence characterization was proven possible over the entirety of WM. The vast range of effects and subtleties of the orientation dependence on MT measures showed the need for, but also the challenges of, a correction method.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

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