13:30 |
0408. |
Quantitative
susceptibility mapping (QSM) of intracranial calcification:
comparison with gradient echo (GRE) phase images and CT
Weiwei Chen1, Tian Liu2, Shuai
Wang3, Wenzhen Zhu1, and Yi Wang4,5
1Radiology, Tongji Hospital, Tongji Medical
College, Huazhong University of Science&Technology,
Wuhan, Hubei, China,2MedImageMetric
LLC, New York, NY, United States, 3University
of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu,
Sichuan, China, 4Radiology,
Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, United
States, 5Biomedical
Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United
States
38 consecutive patients with suspected pathological
intracranial calcifications were imaged with both
gradient echo (GRE) MRI and CT. Both GRE phase and
quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) reconstructed
from GRE data were analyzed for detecting calcifications
using CT as the reference standard. Our data
demonstrated that GRE phase images have poor accuracy,
while QSM has a fair good accuracy.
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13:42 |
0409.
|
Disentangling
contributions from iron and myelin architecture to brain
tissue magnetic susceptibility by using Quantitative
Susceptibility Mapping (QSM)
Ferdinand Schweser1, Andreas Deistung1,
Karsten Sommer1, and Jürgen Rainer
Reichenbach1
1Medical Physics Group, Dept. of Diagnostic
and Interventional Radiology I, Jena University
Hospital, Jena, Germany
Magnetic susceptibility is an intrinsic physical tissue
property which recently became accessible in vivo by a
novel imaging technique called quantitative
susceptibility mapping (QSM). The intermixing of
contributions of iron and myelin, however, complicates
interpretation of susceptibility changes in particular
in neurodegenerative diseases where inflammatory
myelin-loss and focal iron accumulation may occur
simultaneously. We present a novel technique for
substantially increasing the specificity of QSM by
utilizing additional R2* information. The technique
yields two novel contrasts, one is independent of
orientation effects, the other is independent of the
tissue iron concentration.
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13:54 |
0410.
|
Quantitative Magnetic
Susceptibility Mapping of the developing mouse brain
Ioannis Argyridis1, Wei Li1, and
Chunlei Liu1,2
1Brain Imaging and Analysis Center, Duke
University, Durham, NC, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, School of Medicine, Duke University,
Durham, NC, United States
Myelination of nerve axons is essential for brain
function and occurs during early post natal days. We
extract data from quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM)
and diffusion-weighted imaging of three central regions
in newborn healthy mouse brains at four different
stages. Values of fractional anisotropy, apparent
diffusion coefficient and magnetic susceptibility are
analyzed to track myelin change in vivo. Also a new
tool, susceptiblity anisotropy provides insight to the
magnetic properties of unmyelinated fibers. Such
information has become available recently with the
improvement of QSM and can be crucial in the better
monitoring, understanding and treatment of neurological
demylineation diseases.
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14:06 |
0411.
|
Correlation of Brain Iron
with Susceptibility: Comparison of Gradient Echo and WASSR
Acquisition at 3 Tesla
Issel Anne L. Lim1,2, Xu Li2,3,
Craig K. Jones2,3, Jonathan A. D. Farrell2,3,
Deepti S. Vikram2,3, Carlos A. Renjifo4,
and Peter C. M. van Zijl2,3
1Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland,
United States, 2F.
M. Kirby Research Center for Functional Brain Imaging,
Kennedy Krieger Institute, Baltimore, Maryland, United
States, 3Radiology,
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore,
Maryland, United States, 4Johns
Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel,
Maryland, United States
Quantitative susceptibility imaging (QSM) can
characterize the local magnetic environment of the
brain, which is affected by chemical content of the
tissues. Currently, QSM techniques utilize gradient echo
imaging (GRE) to measure spatial differences in signal
phase, identify local field (frequency) differences, and
calculate susceptibility. We compare susceptibility maps
generated from GRE to the WAter Saturation Shift
Referencing (WASSR) method, which determines the
resonance frequency per voxel through measurement of
direct water saturation as a function of RF pulse offset
frequency. Results from five normal male volunteers at
3T correlate with iron concentration in the brain.
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14:18 |
0412. |
The contribution of myelin
to magnetic susceptibility-weighted contrasts in high-field
MRI of the brain
Jongho Lee1, Karin Shmueli2, B-T
Kang3, Bing Yao2, Masaki Fukunaga4,
Peter van Gelderen2, Sara Palumbo5,
Francesca Bosetti5, Afonso Silva3,
and Jeff Duyn2
1University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
PA, United States, 2AMRI,
LFMI, NINDS, NIH, 3LFMI,
NINDS, NIH, 4Osaka
University, 5NIA,
NIH
In this study, the contribution of myelin to both T2*
and frequency contrasts is investigated using a mouse
model of cuprizone-induced demyelination. The
demyelinated brains showed significantly increased T2*
in white matter and a substantial reduction in
gray-white matter frequency contrast, suggesting that
myelin is a primary source for these contrasts.
|
14:30 |
0413.
|
Accelerated Computation of
Regularized Field Map Estimates
Michael J Allison1, and Jeffrey A Fessler1
1Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United
States
Existing regularized field map estimators are highly
robust, but require the minimization of a non-convex
cost function. The current fastest minimization method,
an optimization transfer approach with separable
quadratic surrogates, requires thousands of iterations
to converge. We propose a novel optimization transfer
method which uses Huber's algorithm for quadratic
surrogates to solve the non-convex problem. By framing
the problem in this way, we are able to exploit the
sparse banded structure of typical finite differencing
matrices. We evaluated our algorithm on a brain image
dataset finding that it converged in one hundredth of
the time.
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14:42 |
0414. |
Mapping Magnetic
Susceptibility Anisotropies of White Matter in vivo in the
Human Brain at 7 Tesla
Xu Li1,2, Deepti S Vikram1,2,
Issel Anne L Lim1,3, Craig K Jones1,2,
Jonathan A.D. Farrell1,2, and Peter C.M. van
Zijl1,2
1F.M. Kirby research center for functional
brain imaging, Kennedy Krieger Institute, Baltimore, MD,
United States, 2Radiology,
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore,
MD, United States, 3Biomedical
Engineering, Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States
A method is proposed to map the magnetic susceptibility
anisotropy (MSA) and mean magnetic susceptibility (MMS)
of brain tissue. This is accomplished by combining GRE
phase data collected at a small number of head
orientations with fiber direction information obtained
from DTI. Simulations were performed to test the
reconstruction performance. The reconstructed MMS map in
vivo shows good contrast between gray and white matter,
while the MSA map reveals most of the major central
white matter fiber bundles.
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14:54 |
0415.
|
Magnetic Susceptiblity
Induced MR Signal Frequency Shift in White Matter -
Experimental Comparison Between Lorentzian Sphere and
Generalized Lorentzian Approaches
Jie Luo1, Xiang He2, and Dmitriy A
Yablonskiy3,4
1Chemistry, Washington University in St.Louis,
St. Louis, MO, United States, 2University
of Pittsburg, 3Radiology,
Washington University in St.Louis,4Physics,
Washington University in St.Louis, United States
Phase images obtained by gradient echo MRI provide
enhanced contrast of the brain anatomy. Possible origins
of the phase/frequency contrast such as the magnetic
susceptibility and the water-macromolecule exchange
effects have been discussed. To describe the influence
of tissue magnetic susceptibility on MR signal frequency
shift, a proper relationship between these two values
should be established. In this study, we have
demonstrated that the Generalized Lorentzian Approach
provides satisfactory explanation of the angular
dependence of the phase contrast in longitudinal
structures such as axons in white matter while usually
assumed Lorentzian Sphere Approximation fails.
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15:06 |
0416. |
Assessment of Brain
Anatomy with Gradient-Echo Contrasts: A Comparison between
Magnitude, Phase, and R2* Imaging with Quantitative
Susceptibility Mapping (QSM)
Andreas Deistung1, Andreas Schäfer2,
Ferdinand Schweser1, Karsten Sommer1,
Robert Turner2, and Jürgen Rainer Reichenbach1
1Medical Physics Group, Department of
Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology I, Jena
University Hospital, Jena, Germany, 2Max-Planck-Institute
for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany
This study compares quantitative susceptibility maps
with conventional gradient-echo (GRE) imaging approaches
(magnitude, phase, R2*) with respect to anatomic tissue
contrast. The contrast-to-noise ratio analysis suggests
that deep gray matter structures are delineated best on
susceptibility images. Susceptibility images provide an
excellent and local contrast between white matter and
cortical grey matter that is superior to the other GRE
contrasts. Susceptibility maps also reveal
(sub-)structures of the midbrain, thalamus, and basal
ganglia that are not observed on corresponding
magnitude, phase, and R2* images.
|
15:18 |
0417. |
Probing Intra- and
Extracellular Magnetic Susceptibility in the Brain
Chunlei Liu1,2, and Aiming Lu3
1Brain Imaging and Analysis Center, Duke
University, Durham, NC, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, Duke University, Durham, NC, United
States, 3Center
for MR Research, University of Illinois Medical Center,
Chicago, IL, United States
This study found that sodium MRI exhibits nearly an
order of magnitude larger susceptibility compared to
proton. In sodium MRI, the typical gray and white matter
susceptibility contrast is absent. While white matter
appears largely paramagnetic, some regions may appear
diamagnetic due to intravoxel phase wraps caused by the
unusually large susceptibility. Our data further
indicate a potentially large susceptibility gradient
between extra- and intracellular space as sodium resides
primarily in the extracellular space. Measuring
susceptibility based on sodium MRI may provide
additional insights into sub-cellular susceptibility
distribution and the complex mechanisms involved in
tissue susceptibility contrast.
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