Normalised time-to-peak-distribution curves correlate with cerebral white matter hyperintensities – Could this improve early diagnosis?

Author:

Nasel Christian123,Boubela Roland23,Kalcher Klaudius23,Moser Ewald23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology, University Hospital Tulln, Karl Landsteiner University of Health Sciences, Tulln, Austria

2. Center for Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

3. MR Center of Excellence, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

Abstract

Parameter-free assessment of the time-to-peak (TTP) histogram, termed ‘TTP-distribution curve’ (TDC), of dynamic susceptibility contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DSC-MRI) was introduced as a robust method to evaluate cerebral perfusion. TDC-assessment works fully automatically without the need of an arterial input function, thereby providing full comparability between different measurements. In the investigated sample of 106 patients, a strong dependency of TDC on the hemodynamic state of cerebral microvessels and the arterio-venous bolus-transit time [Formula: see text] was demonstrated. Accordingly, TDC-derived [Formula: see text] was 3.3–3.7 s for control patients and 4.4 s for cerebral small vessel disease patients. Measurements of associated bolus spread velocities ν and accelerations [Formula: see text] additionally revealed a direct effect from spin–spin relaxation time T2-weighted white matter hyperintensity volume, considered to indicate microangiopathy in cerebral small vessel disease, on the TDC-measurements. This strongly supports the prevailing hypothesis that cerebral small vessel disease directly influences DSC-measurements, where the degree could be estimated from an analysis of TDC. While this may be used to correct DSC-parameters for undesirable effects from cerebral small vessel disease, it could also serve to potentially identify patients at risk for cerebral small vessel disease at an early stage, since a subset of patients without yet significant WHM-volume, but clearly altered hemodynamics in TDC-measurements, was identified in this study.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology,Neurology

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