自由水扩散MRI检测早期脑血管疾病白质高信号周围的结构改变

C. Mayer, Felix L. Nägele, M. Petersen, B. Frey, U. Hanning, O. Pasternak, E. Petersen, C. Gerloff, G. Thomalla, B. Cheng
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引用次数: 9

摘要

在脑小血管疾病(CSVD)中,弥散加权MRI (DWI)显示,推测血管起源的白质高信号(WMH)和正常的白质(NAWM)均包含脑微结构改变。细胞外自由水对dwi衍生指标的污染可以用自由水(FW)成像进行校正。我们研究了WMH和周围组织中FW和FW校正分数各向异性(FA-t)的变化及其与脑血管危险因素的关系。我们分析了来自汉堡城市健康研究的1000个核磁共振数据集。DWI生成FW和FA-t图。在FLAIR和t1加权MRI上对WMH掩膜进行分割,并反复扩张,形成8个NAWM掩膜,代表与WMH的距离越来越远。采用线性模型比较WMH和NAWM口罩的FW和FA-t及其与脑血管风险的关系。中位年龄64±14岁。FW和FA-t分别比WMH高8 mm和12 mm。吸烟与NAWM患者FW (p = 0.008)、WMH患者FA-t (p = 0.008)和NAWM患者FA-t (p = 0.003)有显著相关性,而糖尿病和高血压患者则无显著相关性。需要进一步研究NAWM中FW和FA-t的改变是否为WMH发生的预测因子。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Free-water diffusion MRI detects structural alterations surrounding white matter hyperintensities in the early stage of cerebral small vessel disease
In cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD), both white matter hyperintensities (WMH) of presumed vascular origin and the normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) contain microstructural brain alterations on diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI). Contamination of DWI-derived metrics by extracellular free-water can be corrected with free-water (FW) imaging. We investigated the alterations in FW and FW-corrected fractional anisotropy (FA-t) in WMH and surrounding tissue and their association with cerebrovascular risk factors. We analysed 1,000 MRI datasets from the Hamburg City Health Study. DWI was used to generate FW and FA-t maps. WMH masks were segmented on FLAIR and T1-weighted MRI and dilated repeatedly to create 8 NAWM masks representing increasing distance from WMH. Linear models were applied to compare FW and FA-t across WMH and NAWM masks and in association with cerebrovascular risk. Median age was 64 ± 14 years. FW and FA-t were altered 8 mm and 12 mm beyond WMH, respectively. Smoking was significantly associated with FW in NAWM (p = 0.008) and FA-t in WMH (p = 0.008) and in NAWM (p = 0.003) while diabetes and hypertension were not. Further research is necessary to examine whether FW and FA-t alterations in NAWM are predictors for developing WMH.
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