Traditional
Poster Session - Neuro A |
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the abstract pdf. Click on
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Tuesday 8 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
16:00 - 18:00 |
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0766. |
Usefulness of Arterial
Spin Labeling in the Evaluation of Moyamoya Disease
Eun Soo Kim1, and Seung-Koo Lee2
1Department of Radiology, Hallym University
College of Medicine, Pyeongchon, Pyeongchon, Korea, 2Department
of Radiology, Yonsei University College of Medicine,
Seoul, Seoul, Korea
Contrast perfusion and arterial spin label (ASL) are the
latest techniques available for quantitative hemodynamic
analyses. The ASL MR imaging modality is becoming more
clinically relevant, given the recent significant
improvements in the high-field MRI. goal of this project
is to help a better understanding of ASL as a
noninvasive and non-radiation tool for perfusion
territory measurements and predict the prospect of ASL
as perfusion study at children and to compare rCBF
difference between contrast perfusion MRI and ASL MRI at
moyamoya disease. The ASL MRI technique at moyamoya
disease shows a significant estimation of rCBF of PCA
territory compared with enhanced perfusion MRI.
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0767. |
Multi-parametric
Quantitative Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Normal
Appearing Brain in Multiple Sclerosis
JBM Warntjes1,2, I Blystad3, A
Tisell1,4, AM Landtblom5, and P
Lundberg1,6
1Center for Medical Image Science and
Visualization, Linköping, Sweden, 2Department
of Medical and Health Sciences, Clinical Physiology,
Linköping, Sweden, 3Department
of Medical and Health Sciences, Radiology, Linköping,
Sweden, 4Department
of Medical and Health Sciences, Radiation Physics,
Linköping, Sweden, 5Clinical
Neuroscience, Linköping, Sweden, 6County
Council of Östergötland, Department of Radiology UHL,
Linköping, Sweden
In this study a previously reported magnetic resonance
quantification method was applied to 16 healthy subjects
and 16 patients diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. The
absolute R1 and R2 relaxation rates and the proton
density PD were retrieved in 11 different regions of the
brain, carefully avoiding the visible MS lesions or
diffuse hyper-intense areas in the patient group.
Although the variation of the measured values increased
in the MS group no significant difference was observed
for normal appearing matter compared to the normal,
healthy brain, except for the peritrigonial white
matter.
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0768. |
Exploring the Relationship
Between Regional Gray Matter Atrophy and Cognitive
Impairment in Pediatric Multiple Sclerosis
Martina Absinta1, Maria A. Rocca1,
Maria Pia Amato2, Angelo Ghezzi3,
Lucia Moiola4, Agnese Fiorino4,
Pierangelo Veggiotti5, Andrea Falini6,
Giancarlo Comi4, Massimo Filippi1,
and the MS and Neuroimaging Study Groups of the Italian
Neurological Society7
1Neuroimaging Research Unit, Institute of
Experimental Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific
Institute and Vita-Salute San Raffaele University,
Milan, Italy, Italy, 2Department
of Neurology, University of Florence, 3MS
Centre, Ospedale di Gallarate, 4Department
of Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy,
Italy, 5Department
of Child Neurology and Psychiatry, Fondazione IRCCS
Istituto Neurologico C Mondino, 6Department
of Neuroradiology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy,
Italy, 7.....
The patterns of regional abnormalities in the brain gray
matter (GM) in pediatric multiple sclerosis (MS)
patients according to their cognitive profile were
assessed using voxel-based morphometry. Compared to
controls and to cognitively preserved patients,
cognitively impaired patients had atrophy of the
bilateral precuneus, left (L) lingual gyrus, L inferior
frontal operculum, L insula, L middle temporal gyrus,
and L precentral gyrus. In pediatric MS patients,
thalamic atrophy was significantly related to lesion
volumes, while precuneus atrophy correlated with
cognitive impairment, suggesting that the assessment of
the regional distribution of GM atrophy contributes
explaining cognitive deficits in these patients.
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0769. |
Resting State Functional
Connectivity Abnormalities Are Associated With Cognitive
Impairment in Patients With Pediatric Multiple Sclerosis
Maria A. Rocca1, Paola Valsasina2,
Maria Pia Amato3, Martina Absinta2,
Angelo Ghezzi4, Lucia Moiola5,
Agnese Fiorino5, Pierangelo Veggiotti6,
Andrea Falini7, Giancarlo Comi5,
Massimo Filippi2, and the MS and Neuroimaging
Study Groups of the Italian Neurological Society8
1Neuroimaging Research Unit, Institute of
Experimental Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific
Institute and Vita-Salute San Raffaele University,
Milan, Italy, Italy, 2Neuroimaging
Research Unit, Institute of Experimental Neurology, San
Raffaele Scientific Institute and Vita-Salute San
Raffaele University, Milan, Italy, 3Department
of Neurology, University of Florence, 4MS
Centre, Ospedale di Gallarate, 5Department
of Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy, 6Department
of Child Neurology and Psychiatry, Fondazione IRCCS
Istituto Neurologico C Mondino, Pavia, Italy, 7Department
of Neuroradiology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy, 8.....
In this study, we assessed functional connectivity (FC)
at resting state (RS) within and among cognitive
networks in 34 patients with pediatric multiple
sclerosis (MS) and 18 age- and sex-matched healthy
controls. Decreased FC was found in regions of the
posterior lobes, as well as in the cerebellum of the
attention network, salience network (SN) and executive
control network (ECN). Conversely, increased FC was
found in frontal regions of the SN and of the default
mode network (DMN). A decreased FC was associated with
cognitive impairment, whereas increased FC was
correlated with a lower structural damage.
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0770. |
Evaluating pediatric
neuropathologies via multiple TE weighted susceptibility
images using a Multi Shot Multi Echo 3D EPI Sequence
Salil Soman1, Deqiang Qiu2,
Michael Moseley2, David Rex1,
Patrick D Barnes1, and Kristen Yeom1
1Pediatric Neuroradiology, Stanford
University, Stanford, CA, United States, 2Radiological
Sciences Laboratory, Stanford University, Stanford, CA,
United States
Our work summarizes our experience performing multishot
multiecho 3D GRE imaging of 50 pediatric patients using
multiple TE values. We found that images with longer TE
showed findings not visible on 2D GRE images, and that
the shorter TE images still demonstrated findings when
longer TE images were distorted by artifacts (dental
hardware, motion, etc). This sequence is performed in
approximately the same time as a standard SWI sequence,
and has the potential to produce imaging for advanced
techniques such as susceptibility mapping and T2*
calculation. We believe this sequence can result in more
clinically sensitive 3D GRE pediatric examinations.
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0771. |
Using probabilistic
tractography to detect decreases in thalamo-cortical
connectivity following preterm birth
Gareth Ball1, James P Boardman1,2,
Paul Aljabar3, Anand Pandit1,
Tomoki Arichi1,4, Nazakat Merchant1,4,
Daniel Rueckert3, A David Edwards1,4,
and Serena J Counsell1
1Centre for the Developing Brain, Imaging
Sciences Department, MRC Clinical Sciences Centre,
Hammersmith Hospital, Imperial College London, London,
United Kingdom,2Simpson Centre for
Reproductive Health, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh,
Edinburgh, United Kingdom, 3Biomedical
Image Analysis Group, Department of Computing, Imperial
College London, London, United Kingdom, 4Division
of Neonatology, Imperial College London Healthcare NHS
Trust, London, United Kingdom
Preterm birth is associated with a wide range of
neurodevelopmental deficits and disruption of the
thalamo-cortical system is thought to represent a key
component of preterm brain injury. We describe a novel
pipeline for comprehensively mapping thalamo-cortical
connectivity in preterm neonates using probabilistic
tractography. Using this technique we demonstrate that
thalamo-cortical connectivity is significantly reduced
in preterm infants at term-equivalent age compared to
term-born controls.
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0772. |
White Matter Development
in Preterm and Term Infants Assessed by Diffusion Tensor
Imaging with Tract-Based Spatial Statistics
Hou Xin1, Li Xianjun2, Gao Jie1,
Sun Qinli1, Yu Bolang1, Ed X. Wu3,
Wan Mingxi2, and Yang Jian1,2
1Department of radiology, the First
Affiliated Hospital of Medical College of Xi¡¯an
Jiaotong University, Xi'an, Shannxi, China, 2Department
of Biomedical Engineering, School of Life Science and
Technology, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, Shannxi,
China, 3Laboratory
of Biomedical Imaging and Signal Processing, The
University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
This study aimed to investigate the changes of term and
preterm neonates with post-menstrual ages (PMA). 44
healthy neonates with PMA ranging from 33 to 42 weeks
were enrolled. Diffusion tensor images were acquired and
analyzed by tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS). 8
regions of centrum semiovale (CS), corpus callosum (CC),
internal capsule (IC), external capsule (EC), optic
radiation (OR), and anterior limb of internal capsule
(ALIC) were selected. FA values generally increased
while AD, RD, and MD values decreased significantly in
most regions in term group. ALIC exhibited the lowest
diffusion values. Moreover, the slope rates of SCC, CS,
OR, EC with PMA were significant higher than those of
other regions, indicating their rapid maturation.
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0773. |
New DTI marker
characterizing white matter maturation in perisylvian
language network: color-coded orientation component analysis
Jeong-Won Jeong1, Diane C Chugani2,
Tammy Hsia3, Vijay N Tiwari3,
Harry T Chugani4, and Senthil K Sundaram1
1Pediatrics and Neurology, Wayne State
University, Detroit, MI, United States, 2Pediatrics
and Radiology, Wayne State University, 3PET
center, Wayne State University,4Pediatrics,
Neurology, and Radiology, Wayne State University,
Detroit, MI, United States
Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) has the promise that it
may aid the prognosis of language deficits in children
with developmental delay (DD) and Angelman Syndrome (AS)
by visualizing abnormally developed white matter in the
perisylvian language network. Although our previous DTI
studies [1,2] have suggested global impairment of white
matter related to DD and AS by demonstrating
quantitative reduction in diffusivity parameter such as
fractional anisotropy (FA), determining whether a single
DTI scan contains sufficient information to classify and
make decision about an individual patient remains a
critical challenge due to many experimental confounds,
mainly depending on chronological age. The present study
introduced new objective marker to quantify
developmental maturation of the arcuate fasciculus based
on the anterior-posterior (AP) component in colored
coded orientation map which quantifies the first
eigenvector of the diffusion tensor at every voxel. We
first assessed a life-span maturation curve of new
marker from healthy controls and examined its
feasibility to discriminate the children with DD and AS
from typically developing children without age-related
confounds.
|
0774. |
The impact of maximum
turning angle in different deterministic tractography
algorithms applied in pediatric populations
Katyucia de Macedo Rodrigues1,2, Emma Ben-Avi2,
P Ellen Grant2,3, Randy Gollub2,
Paul Caruso4, Kalpathy Krishnamoorthy5,
and Lilla Zollei2
1Radiology, Childrens Hospital Boston,
Boston, Massachusetts, United States, 2Radiology,
Martinos Center/MGH, Boston, Massachusetts, United
States, 3Center
for Fetal-Neonatal Neuroimaging & Developmental Science,
Children's Hospital Boston, Boston, Massachusetts,
United States, 4Radiology,
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts,
United States, 5NEUROLOGY,
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts,
United States
Tractography analysis has been largely used to evaluate
integrity of white matter, to locate specific tracts and
to map connectivity. Different DWI acquisitions and post
processing methods often make comparisons between
studies challenging, with modification in a single
parameter resulting in considerable changes in the final
product. Because there is no consensus on how to
post-process diffusion data, we sought to demonstrate
the impact of maximum turning angle along tracts in four
deterministic tractography reconstruction algorithms in
pediatric population. Our results suggest optimal angle
threshold may change when using different
post-processing algorithms and may vary when analyzing
different fiber bundles.
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0775. |
Postnatal Metabolic
Abnormalities in the CNS of Neonates with Congenital Heart
Disease and Prematurity: A Comparative Study
Ashok Panigrahy1,2, Lisa Paquette3,
Marvin D. Nelson2, Jessica L. Wisnowski2,4,
and Stefan Bluml2,5
1Department of Radiology, Children's Hospital
of Pittsburgh of UPMC, Pittsburgh, PA, United States, 2Department
of Pediatric Radiology, Children's Hospital of Los
Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States, 3Division
of Neonatology, Children's Hospital of Los Angeles, Los
Angeles, California, United States, 4Brain
and Creativity Institute, University of Southern
California, Los Angeles, California, United States, 5Department
of Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern
California, Los Angeles, California, United States
Our study shows distinct metabolic differences in the
CNS of neonates with congenital heart disease and
prematurity including elevated myo-inositol in multiple
regions of babies with congenital heart disease neonates
and selective parietal white matter multi-metabolic
hypermetabolism in the preterm neonates which may
underlie patterns of poor cognitive outcome in these
patients.
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0776. |
Comparison of 3D FSE PCASL
perfusion imaging with gradient-echo and spin-echo DSC-MRI
Alex M. Wong1, Feng-Xian Yan2, and
Ho-Ling Liu1,2
1Department of Medical Imaging and
Intervention, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taoyuan,
Taiwan, 2Department
of Medical Imaging and Radiological Sciences, Chang Gung
University, Taoyuan, Taiwan
We compared the 3D FSE pseudo-continuous ASL (PCASL)
perfusion method with gradient-gradient (GE) and
spin-echo (SE) dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC) MRI
in a group of 12 patients. In each patient, ratios of
mean CBF in the cortical gray matter (GM) to deep white
matter (WM) were obtained for the comparison. The
results showed significant positive correlations between
measurements from PCASL and either of the two DSC
methods (r=0.72 (GE), 0.81 (SE), p < 0.05). The SE-DSC
resulted in similar GM/WM ratios as PCASL, whereas
GE-DSC yielded overestimated ratios which may be
attributed to its greater sensitivity to large vessels.
|
0777. |
Regional Specificity and
Magnitude of Differences in DTI Metrics between Autistic and
Typically Developing Children
Lindsay Walker1,2, Marta Gozzi3,
Audrey Thurm3, Babak Behseta3,
Pooja Modi1, Rhoshel Lenroot4,
Susan Swedo3, and Carlo Pierpaoli1
1PPITS/STBB/NICHD, NIH, Bethesda, MD, United
States, 2CNRM,
USUHS, Bethesda, MD, United States, 3NIMH,
NIH, Bethesda, MD, United States, 4University
of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) shows promise for
studying potential structural abnormalities in the
brains of autistic children. However, the regional
distribution of DTI findings in the literature is
inconsistent across studies. We use DTI to investigate
potential structural differences between the brains of
autistic children as compared to age and gender matched
typically developing children using high quality DTI
data, and measure the regional magnitude of differences
in various DTI metrics. While DTI is promising, caution
must be exercised in interpreting between-group
differences due to the small magnitude of the changes.
|
0778. |
Effects of Prematurity on
Pituitary Gland Volume in Adolescents
Zohra M Ahmadzai1, Deanne K Thompson1,2,
Peter J Anderson1,2, Jeanie Cheong1,3,
and Lex W Doyle1,3
1Murdoch Childrens Research Institute,
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 2University
of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia, 3Royal
Women's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia
Smaller pituitary volumes may be a reflection of chronic
hyperactivity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)
axis, which is associated with prematurity, stress,
anxiety and depression. Pituitary volumes were measured
on T1 images of 186 extremely preterm and 139 full term
18 year olds. Preterm subjects had significantly smaller
pituitary volumes than full term subjects, and females
had larger pituitary volumes than males. Pituitary
volume was not associated with postnatal corticosteroid
therapy or perinatal brain injury. Smaller pituitary
volume is indicative of chronic HPA-axis hyperactivity,
and may account for the neuropsychiatric morbidities
observed in preterm adolescents.
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Traditional
Poster Session - Neuro A |
|
Normal Developing Human Brain
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf. Click on
to view
the poster (Not all posters are available for viewing.)
Tuesday 8 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
16:00 - 18:00 |
|
|
0779. |
Origin of the Bright
Signal in the Corticospinal Tract on T2-weighted
Images and Myelin Water Images.
Bretta Russell-Schulz1, Cornelia Laule2,3,
David Li3, and Alex MacKay1,3
1Physics and Astronomy, University of British
Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 2Pathology
and Laboratory Medicine, University of British Columbia,
Vancouver, BC, Canada,3Radiology, University
of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
We used an extended Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill sequence
with echoes out to 1120ms to characterize longer T2 times
in the healthy corticospinal tract (CST). The CST
intra-/extra-cellular T2 peak
was broadened compared to other white matter structures
and often split into two distinct peaks. The
intracellular and extracellular water environments in
the CST had different T2 times,
causing the intracellular water peak to be pushed into
the shorter myelin water T2 regime
and the extracellular peak to be pushed to higher T2 times.
The CST’s unique MR characteristics should be taken into
consideration when being examined, especially when
compared to pathological tissue.
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0780. |
Human lifespan age-related
changes of the brain proton density by quantitative MRI
Naoko Saito1, Memi Watanabe2,
Osamu Sakai2,3, and Hernan Jara2,4
1Saitama International Medical Center,
Hidaka, Saitama, Japan, 2Boston
Medical Center, United States, 3Boston
University School of Medicine, United States, 4Boston
University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, United States
Purpose To study the proton density (PD) changes of the
brain over the full human lifespan using quantitative
MRI. Methods Forty-four subjects (0.5-87 years) scanned
with the mixed-TSE pulse sequence were segmented into
the whole brain tissues leading to the PD histograms.
The histograms were modeled with Gaussian functions.
Results PD of gray matter (GM) and white matter (WM)
decreased from 0 to 20 years of age and remained
approximately stable during adulthood period. During
senescence period, PD of GM remained stable, while PD of
WM increased. Conclusion Age-related PD changes of the
brain have been studied.
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0781. |
Across 1.5T and 3.0T MR
Field-Strengths: Comparison of Regional Brain Volumes
Derived from Atlas-based Parcellation Data
Adolf Pfefferbaum1,2, Torsten Rohlfing1,
Margaret J. Rosenbloom1,2, and Edith V.
Sullivan2
1Neuroscience Program, SRI International,
Menlo Park, CA, United States, 2Psychiatry
& Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of
Medicine, Stanford, CA, United States
To determine whether structural T1-weighted data
acquired across MR field strengths could be merged,
archival SPGR data acquired at 1.5T and 3.0T within 3
weeks in 114 adults were compared using intraclass
correlation (ICC) computed on 24 cortical, subcortical,
and CSF-filled volumes derived from an automated,
unsupervised atlas registration/parcellation method.
Application of regression correction functions for each
region yielded significant ICC increases (mean
improvement=.087; post-correction ICC range=.599 in
globus pallidus to .998 in lateral ventricles). Thus,
selected T1-weighted regional anatomical brain data can
be reliably combined across 1.5T and 3.0T field
strengths with the application of an appropriate
correction procedure.
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0782. |
Automatic multi-label
segmentation of the preterm brain with the use of adaptive
atlases
Antonios Makropoulos1, Ioannis S. Gousias1,
Christian Ledig2, Paul Aljabar2,
Ahmed Serag2, Joseph V. Hajnal3,
A. David Edwards1, Serena J. Counsell1,
and Daniel Rueckert2
1Centre for the Developing Brain, Imperial
College London, London, United Kingdom, 2Biomedical
Image Analysis Group, Department of Computing, Imperial
College London, London, United Kingdom, 3Imaging
Sciences Department, MRC Clinical Sciences Centre,
Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom
The changes that occur in brain anatomy between early
preterm and term age are significant and present
challenges to an accurate automatic MRI segmentation of
the preterm brain. Atlas-based techniques are amongst
the most popular in brain MRI segmentation. However,
when the atlases used deviate significantly from the
subjects to be segmented, they result in inaccuracies.
Within this context, we propose a
Expectation-Maximization segmentation technique to
propagate multiple labels, 50 in total, from manually
segmented atlases around term to early preterm ages. The
presented framework further adapts the priors to the
target image so as to compensate for these inaccuracies.
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0783. |
Visualization of the
Meyer’s loop in 3D T1-weighted images in infants:
Demonstration of interhemishperic asymmetry of anterior
extent of the Meyer’s loop
Ho Jun Lee1, and Eung Yeop Kim2
1Radiology, Armed Forces Yangju Hospital,
Yangju, Gyunggi-do, Korea, 2Radiology,
Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea
There was a recent publication that there is
interhemispheric asymmetry on the anterior margin of the
Meyer's loop by means of perimetry. Only few studies
have compared this by imaging. We measured the distance
of the anterior margin of the Meyer's loop from the
temporal pole (DTT) in both hemishperes, which appear as
high SI distinguishable from adjacent structures on
MPRAGE at a certain time window during myelination, in
47 infants. The measurements were significantly shorter
in the left (left :22.5±2.7 mm, right: 24.0±2.4 mm).
This is the first study to our knowledge to backup that
there is interhemishperic asymmetry of DTT image wise,
and will encourage validation by other investigators.
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0784. |
BOLD Imaging of Adults and
Infants Under Hypoxia and Hyperoxia
Matthew Borzage1,2, Bimal Agrawal1,
John Wood2,3, Ashok Panigrahy4,5,
Marvin D Nelson4, Istvan Seri1,6,
and Stefan Blüml4,7
1The Center for Fetal and Neonatal Medicine
and the USC Division of Neonatal Medicine, Children's
Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, Ca, United States, 2Viterbi
School of Engineering, University of Southern
California, Los Angeles, Ca, United States, 3Division
of Cardiology, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los
Angeles, Ca, United States,4Radiology,
Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, Ca, United
States, 5Pediatric
Radiology, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC,
Pittsburgh, Pa, United States, 6Keck
School of Medicine, University of Southern California,
Los Angeles, Ca, United States, 7Rudi
Schulte Research Institute, Santa Barbara, Ca, United
States
Blood oxygenation level dependent signal changes due to
hypoxia and hyperoxia in healthy adults and a neonate
were acquired. Exponential curves were fitted to
parameterize the rate of change following FiO2
manipulations and the rates of change were compared. The
rate of recovery from hypoxia depended on the subject
scanned: adult recovery was markedly more rapid than the
neonatal recovery. This preliminary data indicates that
there may be substantial differences between the
neonatal brain and adult brain when reacting to oxygen
manipulations.
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0785. |
Tract-based spatial
statistics(TBSS) investigation of the development of white
matter between twin infants and preterm infants at term
equivalent age
Hye Jin Jeong1, So Yeon Shim2,
Joon Sup Jeong1, Se Hong Oh1, Sung
Yeon Park1, Young Bo Kim1, and
Zang Hee Cho1
1Gachon University of Medicine and Science,
Neuroscience Research Instiute, Namdong-gu, Incheon,
Korea, 2Gachon
University Gil Hospital, Department of Pediatrics,
Namdong-gu, Incheon, Korea
Tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) performed spatial
normalization for group analysis in brain white matter.
Due to the limited size of the mother's womb, twin has a
high incidence of the prematurity. We aim to compare the
development of brain white matter between preterm
infants and twin infants at term gestational age using
tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS). According to the
voxel-wise analyses there was no significant FA
difference between twin infants and preterm infants at
term equivalent age.
|
0786. |
Fetal imaging with EPI –
FOV, SNR and distortion correction
Zhiqing Wu1, Rita G. Nunes1,2,
Shaihan J. Malik1, Georgia Lockwood Estrin1,
Emer J. Hughes1, Christina Malamateniou1,
Serena J. Counsell1, Mary A. Rutherford1,
and Joseph V Hajnal1
1Robert Steiner MRI Unit,Imaging Sciences
Department, MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Hammersmith
Hospital, Imperial College London, London, United
Kingdom, 2Institute
of Biophysics and Biomedical Engineering, Faculty of
Sciences, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal
Fetal brain imaging with echo planar imaging (EPI) has
extensive applications, notably Diffusion Tensor
Imaging. EPI brain imaging in adults and children
normally employs the smallest field of view combined
with parallel imaging to reduce distortion and mitigate
signal losses from T2&T2* decay. The balance of issues
is quite different for fetal applications: the fetal
brain has much longer T2&T2* and there is no air or
mineralised bone within the womb to produce localised B0
anomalies, but there is large scale fetal motion. We
have explored the implications of these factors to
achieve improved Slice-to-Volume reconstruction (SVR)
using EPI.
|
0787. |
Voxelwise Analysis of
White Matter Integrity in Healthy Adolescents
Alex Smith1, Michael De Bellis2,3,
and Nan-kuei Chen1
1Brain Imaging and Analysis Center, Duke
University, Durham, North Carolina, United States, 2Department
of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Duke University
Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, United States, 3Healthy
Childhood Brain Development and Developmental
Traumatology Research Program, Duke University Medical
Center, Durham, North Carolina, United States
Fractional Anisotropy, as measured by DTI, increases
with age and intelligence during normal development,
however, this is understudied in developing adolescents.
DTI datasets from healthy children were acquired, and a
voxelwise analysis was performed contrasting age and IQ
against FA. Significant clusters were discovered in the
corpus callosum and splenium correlating with age, while
significant clusters were discovered globally when
correlating with IQ. These findings suggest that white
matter integrity increases with age and IQ in
adolescence, and can have important implications later
in life.
|
0788. |
Imaging of Neonatal Brain
Development using Arterial Spin Labeling MRI.
Jill B De Vis1, Manon JNL Benders2,
Linda S de Vries2, Floris Groenendaal2,
Karina J Kersbergen2, Thomas Alderliesten2,
Jeroen Hendrikse1, and Esben T Petersen1
1Radiology, University Medical Center,
Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands, 2Neonatology,
University Medical Center, Utrecht, Netherlands
Human brain maturation is incomplete at birth. During
development the brain undergoes anatomical and
functional maturation. This includes proliferation of
the neurones, their migration to specific sites and
myelin formation. These processes are reflected in local
cerebral energy demand. In the past, Positron Emission
Tomography has been used to study glucose metabolism
during different developmental stages in infants.
Arterial Spin Labeling MRI provides us with a
non-invasive way to assess Cerebral Blood Flow in
different brain regions and can be used as well to study
neonatal brain development.
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|
Traditional
Poster Session - Neuro A |
|
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf. Click on
to view
the poster (Not all posters are available for viewing.)
Tuesday 8 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
16:00 - 18:00 |
|
|
0789. |
White matter abnormalities
before the onset of psychosis: a prospective study of an
ultra-high-risk cohort
Francesco Carletti1,2, Shannon H. Kolind1,3,
James B. Woolley2, Rocio Perez-Iglesias2,
Matthew R. Broome4, Elvira Bramon2,
Louise Johns5, Steve C.R. Williams1,
Philip K. McGuire2, and Gareth J. Barker1
1Department of Neuroimaging, Center for
Neuroimaging Sciences, Institute of Psychiatry, King's
College London, London, United Kingdom, 2Department
of Psychosis Studies, Institute of Psychiatry, King's
College London, London, United Kingdom, 3FMRIB
Centre, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, 4Health
Science Research Institute, Warwick Medical School,
University of Warwick, Coventry, United Kingdom, 5Department
of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College
London, London, United Kingdom
Structural neuroimaging studies indicate that psychotic
disorders such as schizophrenia are associated with
white matter (WM) abnormalities, and some of these
changes are evident before the onset of psychosis. We
investigated a cohort at 'ultra-high-risk' (UHR) for
developing psychosis using diffusion tensor imaging
(DTI) by comparing individual subjects’ data to a
population based mean and standard deviation (z-score
mapping). Our aim was to assess, prior to psychosis
onset, whether z-score mapping can detect at the
individual level FA changes in (i) UHR compared to
controls (ii) UHR subjects who subsequently became
psychotic versus those who did not.
|
0790. |
Correlation Between MEG
Gamma Phase Locking and 1H-MRS Determined Temporal Lobe GABA
in Subjects With Schizophrenia and Normal Controls
Mark S Brown1, Peter Teale2, Dan
Collins2, Bryce Pasko2, Debra
Singel3, Don C Rojas2, and Martin
Reite2
1Radiology, University of Colorado Denver,
Aurora, Colorado, United States, 2Psychiatry,
University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, Colorado, United
States, 3Brain
Imaging Center, University of Colorado Denver, Aurora,
Colorado, United States
Magnetoencephalography (MEG) recordings of neural
oscillations of the gamma band (~40 Hz) phase locking
factor (PLF) yield a number that measures how well the
response coincides with the stimulus in time.
Schizophrenic subjects show impaired tracking ability
compared to controls. We have measured the GABA levels
in the temporal lobe (auditory cortex) of schizophrenics
using J-edited 1H MRS and correlated them with the PLF.
Schizophrenics show a negative correlation with PLF
compared to the positive correlation exhibited by
controls. The results suggest that the impairment is not
due to lower levels of GABA, but rather impaired
utilization by the schizophrenics.
|
0791. |
Correlation between brain
volume change and impairment of the inhibition control in
patients with schizophrenia
Gwang-Won Kim1, Moo-Suk Lee2,
Heoung-Keun Kang3, Tae-Jin Park4,
Jong-Chul Yang5, Gyung-Ho Chung6,
and Gwang-Woo Jeong3
1Research Institute of Medical Imaging,
Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju,
Chonnam, Korea, 2Psychiatry,
Chonnam National University Hospital,3Radiology,
Chonnam National University Hospital, 4Psychology,
Chonnam National University, 5Psychiatry,
Chonbuk National University Hospital, Korea, 6Radiology,
Chonbuk National University Hospital
Cognitive deficits in schizophrenia are associated with
dysfunction of the lateral prefrontal cortex closely
related to delayed-response working memory (WM). Despite
recent studies in identifying the neural circuitry
contributing to delayed-response WM, the correlation
between brain volume change and impairment of the
inhibition control in patients with schizophrenia have
not yet been completely specified. The purpose of this
study was to discriminate the brain activation patterns
associated with the effect of distraction during the
working memory maintenance for the human faces in the
healthy controls and patients with schizophrenia by
using a function magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), and
further to assess the relationship between changes of
the activation patterns due to impairment of the
inhibition control and reduction of the volumes of the
corresponding brain areas in patients with
schizophrenia.
|
0792. |
A 1H-MRS study of GABA in
the auditory cortex in persons with autism spectrum disorder
Mark S Brown1, Sarah Steinmetz2,
Debra Singel3, Susan Hepburn2, and
Don C Rojas2
1Radiology, University of Colorado Denver,
Aurora, Colorado, United States, 2Psychiatry,
University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, Colorado, United
States, 3Brain
Imaging Center, University of Colorado Denver, Aurora,
Colorado, United States
The excitation/inhibition imbalance (EI) theory of the
pathophysiology of autism spectrum disorders (ASD)
proposes that high ratios of excitatory to inhibitory
neuronal processes could explain the ASD phenotype.
Evidence for GABAergic inhibitory deficits has been of
interest for some time and is supported by a significant
body of evidence. We measured levels of GABA in the left
auditory cortex using J-edited 1H-MRS in subjects with
ASD and compared them to healthy controls. The results
show significantly reduced levels of GABA in the ASD
group. These results, combined with our previously
reported elevated glutamate levels, provide support for
the EI theory.
|
0793. |
Increased brain volumes
and cortical surface area in adolescents and young adults at
increased genetic risk for Bipolar Affective Disorder
Rhoshel Lenroot1,2, Pui Ka Yeung2,
Gloria Roberts1, Clare McCormack1,
Michael Breakspear1,3, Melissa Green1,
Andrew Frankland1, Adam Wright1,
Phoebe Lau1, Florence Levy1, Herng
Chan1, Dusan Hadzi-Pavlovic1, and
Philip Mitchell1
1University of New South Wales, Randwick,
NSW, Australia, 2Neuroscience
Research Australia, Randwick, NSW, Australia, 3Queensland
Institute of Medical Research
Characterization of brain morphometry in individuals at
elevated genetic risk for Bipolar Affective Disorder may
illuminate early stages of the disorder and identify
potential endophenotypes. Structural MRI images were
acquired in 85 adolescents and young adults at elevated
genetic risk for BPD and 84 matched control subjects.
Brain volumes, cortical surface area and thickness were
examined using an automated method. At-risk subjects had
increased brain volumes and surface area, including
regions such as the anterior cingulate and insula, but
cortical thickness was not different. These finding
suggest surface area may be a useful endophenotype for
genetic studies of BPAD.
|
0794. |
High Resolution Sodium MRI
and Abnormal Sodium Ion Pump in the Bipolar Brain
Fernando Emilio Boada1, Vincent Lee1,
Yongxian Qian1, Mary Phillips2,
and David Kupfer2
1Radiology and Bioengineering, University of
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States, 2Psychiatry,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States
Regional Differences in Sodium Content between Euthymic
Bipolar Subjects and Normal Controls were studied using
High Resolution Sodium MRI at 7T. Results support the
existence of statistically significant differences in
sodium concentration in the basal ganglia but not in the
average total brain concentration.
|
0795. |
Study of Prefrontal
Cortical Metabolism in Stressed and Resilient Mice in Social
Defeat Model of Depression
Anant Bahadur Patel1, Pandichelvam Veeraiah1,
Judith Noronha1, Puneet Bagga1,
and Arvind Kumar1
1NMR Microimaging and Spectroscopy, Centre
for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad, Andhra
Pradesh, India
Mechanisms responsible for the abnormal glutamate and
GABA level in the brain of depressed patients remain to
be understood. Current study investigate cerebral
metabolism in prefrontal cortex of depressed and
resilient mice. Level of glutamate, aspartate, taurine
and choline was found to be decreased in depressed mice
while resilient mice showed increased GABA without any
change in other neurometabolites. Depressed mice are
associated with reduced glutamatergic and GABAergic
activity.
|
0796. |
Do antiepileptic drugs
affect brain structure? A cross-sectional investigation of
morphometric differences associated with sodium valproate.
Heath R. Pardoe1, and Graeme D. Jackson1,2
1Brain Research Institute, Florey
Neuroscience Institutes, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 2Department
of Medicine, University of Melbourne, Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia
Medication is the standard treatment option to reduce
seizures associated with epilepsy. Although a number of
studies have used magnetic resonance imaging to
investigate the morphometric properties of the epilepsy
brain, very few have systematically investigated the
relationship between anti-epileptic medication and brain
structure. Some studies have reported neuroanatomical
changes associated with acute ingestion of sodium
valproate, a commonly used anti-epileptic medication. In
this study we use morphometric analysis of structral MRI
to determine if sodium valproate, administered in
clincal doses, has any effect on brain structure.
|
0797. |
In vivo investigation
of metabolic changes in the first episode schizophrenia with
combined 31P/1H
MR spectroscopy
Alexander Gussew1, Stefan Smesny2,
Patrick Hiepe1, Reinhard Rzanny1,
and Jürgen R. Reichenbach1
1Medical Physics Group, Department of
Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology I, Jena
University Hospital, Jena, Thuringia, Germany, 2Department
of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Jena University
Hospital, Jena, Thuringia, Germany
31P/1H CSI data and high
resolution structural MR images were acquired in brains
of non-medicated first episode schizophrenic patients
and age matched healthy controls to investigate
metabolic and morphological processes, which underlie
the neurodegenerative changes occurring during the
manifestation of schizophrenia. Significant group
differences of brain white matter contents were detected
frontal brain regions. Further, significant increased
levels of NAA, glutamate, creatine and choline as well
as phosphodiesters and phosphocreatine were observed in
the anterior cingular cortex of patients indicating for
elevated neurotransmission, membrane turnover and energy
demand in this brain area.
|
0798. |
An fMRI Study of Ketamine
Induced Temporal Dissociation
Francesco Giorlando1, Paul Fletcher2,
and Peter Brotchie3,4
1Psychiatry, University of Melbourne,
Geelong, VIC, Australia, 2Department
of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge,
Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom, 3Radiology,
Barwon Medical Imaging, The Geelong Hospital, Geelong,
VIC, Australia, 4The
University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
An fMRI trial of temporal dissociation induced by
ketamine was conducted in 27 volunteers. The study used
an event related paradigm and was placebo controlled.
The Temporal Order Assessment task was the main measure
of interest. Significant dorsal anterior cingulate
cortex and inferior frontal cortex activation was found
with inverted temporal judgements. Ketamine
administration was associated with increased left
temporo-parietal-occipital junction activity. The
results are discussed with relation to the
cortico-limbic theory of dissociation and the
implications for theories of temporal perception.
|
0799. |
Differential Pattern of
Striatal Cerebral Blood Volume After a Haloperidol Challenge
in Rats
Dirk Ernst Cleppien1, Alexander Sartorius2,
Claudia Falfan-Melgoza1, Natalia Gass1,
Lei Zheng3, and Wolfgang Weber-Fahr1
1NeuroImaging, Central Institute of Mental
Health, Mannheim, Germany, 2Clinic
of Psychiatry and Psychotherapie, Central Institute of
Mental Health, Mannheim, Germany,3Experimental
Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mannheim,
Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany
Haloperidol is a widely used antipsychotic drug with
potent dopamine D2 receptor antagonistic properties. To
understand its impact on the striatum high-resolution
regional cerebral blood volume (rCBV) mapping with
magnetic resonance imaging was performed in 10 rats. The
standardized rCBV maps show areas of activation
corresponding well with the findings in the literature
under c-fos activation. A deactivation in the central
caudate-putamen could corroborate findings of a T2*
signal loss in some parts of the CPu. This underlines
the importance of high-resolution functional rCBV
measurements covering larger parts of the brain.
|
0800. |
Volumetric
Pseudo-Continuous Arterial Spin Label (PCASL) Imaging in
Chronic Alcoholism: Return to Default Mode Network Activity
Levels after a Spatial Working Memory Task
Edith V. Sullivan1, Eva M. Müller-Oehring1,2,
Anne-Lise Pitel1, Sandra Chanraud1,
Ajit Shankaranarayanan3, David C. Alsop4,5,
Torsten Rohlfing2, and Adolf Pfefferbaum1,2
1Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Stanford
University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, United
States, 2Neuroscience
Program, SRI International, Menlo Park, CA, United
States, 3GE
Healthcare, Menlo Park, CA, United States, 4Radiology,
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, United
States, 5Radiology,
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States
3D whole-brain pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling
(PCASL) measured cerebral blood perfusion (CBF) in
alcoholics and controls while resting, task-engaged, and
resting again. Based on bilateral, normalized CBF, both
groups showed a default mode network (DMN) pattern (high
activation for rest, low for task, return to high CBF in
second rest) in medial frontal, temporal, calcarine,
insular, cingulate, posterior precuneus cortices and
hippocampus-amygdala, and a task-activated pattern (high
task activation, low for rest) in cerebellum, parietal,
occipital, middle precuneus cortices. Alcoholics
differed from controls in CBF levels of insula and the
rest-task-rest CBF pattern for anterior precuneus,
regions involved in addiction.
|
0801. |
Investigation of T2*
Mapping on Combat-related TBI patient
Binquan Wang1,2, Ping-Hong Yeh1,2,
Wei Liu1,2, John Graner3,4,
Haiying Tang2,5, Hai Pan1,2,
Dominic E Nathan1,2, Rachel Wolfowitz4,
Jamie Harper4, John Ollinger4,
Terrence R Oakes2,4, and Gerard Riedy4,5
1Henry M Jackson Foundation for the
Advancement of Military Medicine, Bethesda, MD, United
States, 2Center
for Neuroregenerative Medicine, Bethesda, MD, United
States,3National Capital Neuroimaging
Consortium, Bethesda, MD, United States, 4National
Intrepid Center of Excellence (NICOE), Bethesda, MD,
United States, 5Uniformed
Services University of The Health Sciences of The
Health, Bethesda, MD, United States
T2* mapping of combat-related TBI patients were
investigated. The T2* mapping demonstrates the advantage
to detect the brain lesions as previous studies. And
both of voxel wise and ROI analysis shows TBI patients
had significantly longer T2* relaxation time than
healthy controls. And the positive relationship was
illustrated by the regression between T2* and
neurobehavioral symptoms. Our findings may be used to
predict the clinical symptoms of military-related TBI
patients
|
|
|
Traditional
Poster Session - Neuro A |
|
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf. Click on
to view
the poster (Not all posters are available for viewing.)
Tuesday 8 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
16:00 - 18:00 |
|
|
0802. |
Different patterns of
contralesional passive movement fMRI according to pattern of
recovery in severe hemiplegic stroke patients.
Ji-Young Kim1, Jeehye Seo2,
Hui-jin Song2, Seong-Uk Jin2, Jang
Woo Park2, Moon Han2, Jong Su
Baeck2, Hee-Kyung Kim3, and
Yongmin Chang4
1School of Medicine, Kyungpook National
University, Daegu, Jung-gu, Korea, 2Medical
& Biological Engineering, Kyungpook National University,
Korea, 3Applied
Chemistry, Kyungpook National University, Korea, 4Molecular
Medicine, Kyungpook National University, Korea
Stroke patients with hand function in severe hemiplegic
are known to be determined their prognosis at acute
period of stroke. Brunnstrum motor recovery stage (BMS)
and motor evoked potential (MEP) have been used to
predict prognosis in stroke patients well. Using the BMS
and MEP, stroke patients who have no MEP of affected
hand or no hand movement with BMS 1 in 4 weeks from
onset of stroke were usually regarded as that with poor
prognosis. Nevertheless, most patients regarded as poor
prognosis could recover their hand function. Recent
researchers revealed functional connectivity of
homologous primary motor cortex as a prognostic factor
in stroke patients. The aim of this study is to (1)
compare inter-hemispheric functional connectivity scores
with in homologous M1 among stroke patients groups which
showed different recovery patterns by means of resting
state fMRI and (2) find good prognostic phenomeni to
severe hemiplegic stroke patients who had no hand
movement with BMS 1 and MEP response by means of fMRI
with passive movement.
|
0803.
|
Improved DMN connectivity
in patients with unilateral stenosis of internal carotid
artery after carotid stent placement: A resting-state fMRI
study
Feng-Xian Yan1, Tsong-Hai Lee2,
Ho-Fai Wong3, and Ho-Ling Liu1,3
1Department of Medical Imaging and
Radiological Sciences, Chang Gung University, Taoyuan,
Taiwan, 2Department
of Neurology and Stroke Center, Chang Gung Memorial
Hospital, and Chang Gung University College of Medicine,
Taoyuan, Taiwan, 3Department
of Medical Imaging and Intervention, Chang Gung Memorial
Hospital, Taoyuan, Taiwan
This study aimed to investigate the default-mode network
(DMN) and task-positive network (TPN) connectivity
changes in patients with unilateral internal carotid
artery stenosis before and after carotid stent
placement. Sixteen patients underwent resting-state (RS)
fMRI and DSC perfusion MRI scans one week before and six
months after stenting. RS functional images were
analyzed with seeds defined as a spherical ROI within
PCC and a PCC mask. This study found impaired functional
connectivity in DMN and TPN, which could recover after
the stenting. The results were not directly related to
regional perfusion deficits and thus likely linked to
the neuronal origins.
|
0804.
|
Spontaneous depolarization
waves in medetomidine sedated Sprague-Dawley rats detected
by fMRI
Artem Shatillo1, Joanna Huttunen1,
Antti Airaksinen1, Juha-Pekka Niskanen1,2,
and Olli Grohn1
1Department of Neurobiology, University of
Eastern Finland, Kuopio, Finland, 2Department
of Applied Physics, University of Eastern Finland,
Kuopio, Finland
Spreading depolarization (SD) waves are typically
observed only under pathophysiological conditions. We
detected spontaneously occurring SDs in 9 Sprague-Dawley
rats during 1 hour long BOLD fMRI study under
medetomidine sedation. Total of 17 waves were detected
lasting for 193.3 ± 58.8 sec in one cortical ROI,
propagating with speed of 2.93±0.6 mm/min. Observed
propagation pattern and involvement of subcortical
regions is atypical for ‘classical’ spreading
depolarization described in literature and needs further
investigations.
|
0805. |
Language-related resting
state connectivity in aphasia
Shiree Heath1, Lyndsey Nickels2,
Anthony Angwin3, Anna MacDonald1,
Sophia van Hees1, Kori Johnson4,
David Copland1, and Katie McMahon4
1Centre for Clinical Research, University of
Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, 2Macquarie
Centre for Cognitive Science, Macquarie University,
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, 3School
of Health & Rehabilitation Sciences, University of
Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia, 4Centre
for Advanced Imaging, University of Queensland, St
Lucia, Queensland, Australia
The current study sought to identify differences in
resting state connectivity between language-related
regions in unimpaired speakers and individuals with
aphasia. Results show distinct patterns of connectivity
for the two participant groups. Controls demonstrated
greater connectivity than participants with aphasia
between contralateral regions in the opposite cerebral
lobe. Compared to controls, participants with aphasia
showed greater connectivity in both ipsilateral and
contralateral regions restricted to two specific regions
in the temporal and parietal lobes. This pattern may
indicate that the major disruption in connectivity for
individuals with aphasia exists between homologous
regions in the two cerebral hemispheres.
|
0806. |
Cerebral responses to
Valsalva manoeuvre consists of multiple components
reflecting different aspects of autonomic function in
patients suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome
Jiabao He1, Julia L Newton2, and
Andrew M Blamire1
1Newcastle Magnetic Resonance Centre,
Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and
Wear, United Kingdom, 2Institue
for Ageing and Health, Newcastle University, Newcastle
upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear, United Kingdom
Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is associated with
cognitive problem and autonomic dysfunction, where the
patient shows abnormal responses to autonomic challenge
such as the Valsalva manoeuvre (VM). Valsalva manoeuvre
provokes phased physiological response in blood pressure
and cerebral blood flow, resulting in a complex cerebral
response.In this work, we conducted dual echo GE fMRI to
monitor the tissue water density and cerebral
oxygenation level during the VM in CFS patients, and
found that the BOLD signal dynamics correlated to
measures of autonomic activity. Different components of
cerebral reponses are related to various aspects of
autonomic control.
|
0807. |
Motor dysfunction in
Parkinson’s disease and Multiple System Atrophy and the
effect of dopamine drug
Mohit Saxena1, Senthil S Kumaran2,
Vinay Goyal1, and Madhuri Behari1
1Department of Neurology, All India Institute
of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, Delhi, India, 2Department
of N.M.R., All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New
Delhi, Delhi, India
Synopsis: Parkinson’s disease (PD) and Multiple System
Atrophy (MSA) are characterized by motor dysfunction. In
this fMRI study we tried to observe any difference in
the BOLD activation pattern with respect to the
progression of the disease, with reference to the
effectiveness of the dopaminergic therapy.
|
0808. |
A Dynamic Causal Modeling
study in empathy for pain stimuli with fibromyalgia
Huijin Song1, JeeHye Seo1, Seonguk
Jin1, Hee-Kyung Kim1, Moon-jung
Hwang2, Kyung Jin Suh3, and
Yongmin Chang4
1Medical & Biological Engineering, Kyungpook
National University, Daegu, Korea, 2GE
healthcare, Seoul, Korea, 3Radiology,
College of Medicine, Dongguk University, Gyungju, Korea, 4Medical
& Biological Engineering, Diagnostic Radiology,
molecular medicine, Kyungpook National University, Daegu,
Korea
Fibromyalgia(FM) is disorder of unknown etiology1,
characterized by chronic widespread pain and are often
accompanied by symptoms of sleep disturbance, anxiety,
memory problems, fatigue, and exhaustion. Previous
functional imaging studies of FM mainly focused on pain
by physical stimuli or functional connectivity. However,
there is no emotional and cognitive effective
connectivity study with FM. Therefore, the aim of this
study investigates the effective connectivity using
dynamic causal modeling and difference of pain network
between FM patient and healthy controls in the empathy
for pain stimuli. Based on our finding that the DLPFC
delivers controlled pain information and intensity to
insula, and insula assesses the information and
perceives the pain intensity with ACC. In this study, in
patients with FM, the effective connectivity between
DLPFC and insula was decreased, but effective
connectivity between insula and ACC was increased.
Therefore, the role of DLPFC in emotional pain
processing is associated with control of pain intensity
and inhibitory system. If the DLPFC has a deficit or a
dysfunction, patients under chronic pain perceive the
more pain intensity than normal.
|
0809. |
Primary Visual Cortex
Activation Induced by Tactile Stimulation in Individuals
with Retinitis Pigmentosa
Samantha I. Cunningham1, James D. Weiland2,
Pinglei Bao3, and Bosco S. Tjan3,4
1Dept. of Biomedical Engineering, University
of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United
States, 2Dept.
of Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern
California,3Neuroscience Graduate Program,
University of Southern California, 4Dept.
of Psychology, University of Southern California
FMRI was used to assess the inter-subject variability of
visual cortex reorganization in individuals suffering
from retinitis pigmentosa (RP), a degenerative retinal
disease resulting in tunnel vision and eventual loss of
sight. BOLD responses were measured as RP and sighted
control groups completed two tactile discrimination
tasks during successive scans in a 3T Siemens scanner.
We found that vision deprivation leads to elevated
activation of the visual cortex elicited with tactile
stimuli, while the degree and location of activation in
the primary visual cortex correlates with the degree and
location of visual field loss.
|
0810. |
Comparison of
Ballistocardiac Artifact Removal Algorithms for Detection of
IED
Sung Suk Oh1, Yeji Han1, Joong Koo
Kang2, Eun Mi Lee2, and HyunWook
Park1
1Electrical Engineering, KAIST, Daejeon,
Korea, 2Neurology,
University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Asan Medical
Center, Seoul, Korea
A simultaneous recording of electroencephalogram (EEG)
and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is an
effective method for epilepsy diagnosis. Using the
temporal information of interictal epileptiform
discharge (IED) detected in the EEG signal, the brain
region related to the epilepsy can be detected with high
spatial resolution in the fMRI data. To detect the IEDs
more accurately, however, the measured EEG signal is
analyzed after removing the ballistocardiac artifact
(BA), which is induced by subject¡¯s heartbeat in a high
magnetic field. In this study, three different BA
removal methods, such as AAAS (advanced average artifact
subtraction [1]), OBS (optimal basis set [2]), and ICA
(independent component analysis [3]), were applied to
the epilepsy data and their performances were evaluated
in terms of preservation and restoration of the IED
shapes.
|
0811. |
Amplitude of low frequency
fluctuations and functional connectivity in resting state
fMRI among PTSD
Xiaodan YAN1,2, Mariana Lazar1,
Victoria Cressman3, Leslie Prichep2,
Clare Henn-Haase2, Irene Lee2,
Rachel Yehuda4, Thomas Neylan5,
Daniel Sodickson1, and Charles Marmar2
1Radiology, New York University, New York,
NY, United States, 2Department
of Psychiatry, New York University, New York, NY, United
States, 3Department
of Psychiatry, Manhattan VA Medical Center, New York,
NY, United States, 4Department
of Psychiatry, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York,
NY, United States, 5Department
of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco,
San Francisco, CA, United States
Neural mechanisms of posttraumatic stress disorder
(PTSD) are increasingly being investigated with
neuroimaging techniques; however, previous studies have
conflicting findings partly due to the differences in
designed tasks and targeted behavioral variables. Using
resting state fMRI (rs-fMRI), the present study examined
the amplitudes of low frequency fluctuation (ALFF) as
well as functional connectivity (FC) patterns associated
with PTSD among 38 combat veterans (19 diagnosed as
PTSD+ and 19 PTSD-, with the two groups matched on age,
gender, education level and ethnicity). Compared to the
PTSD- group, the PTSD+ group showed significantly
decreased ALFF at the thalamus, precuneus, dorsal
frontal cortex (DFC), posterior cingulate cortex (PCC),
and increased ALFF at ventral anterior cingulate cortex
(ACC), insula, and ventral frontal cortex (VFC). PTSD+
demonstrated primarily decreases of FC-s, particularly
seeded at the thalamus, PCC, precuneus. ALFF values at
DFC were negatively correlated with PTSD severity,
whereas those at vACC and thalamus were negatively
correlated with severity of re-experience symptom. ALFF
at insula and VFC were negatively correlated with
depression and dissociative symptoms respectively, and
those at precuneus were positively correlated with
emotion regulation capacity. These results suggest that
spontaneous brain activity is associated with PTSD
pathology.
|
0812. |
Functional Connectivity in
Blast-Induced vs. non-Blast-Induced Traumatic Brain Injury
Erik B Beall1, Stephen M Rao2,
Micheal D Phillips1, and Mark J Lowe1
1Radiology, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH,
United States, 2Lou
Ruvo Center for Brain Health, Cleveland Clinic,
Cleveland, OH, United States
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is a heterogeneous
neurologic disorder. Past research has provided hints
that blast-induced TBI represents a distinct clinical
subtype, with a distinct injury mechanism causing more
widespread and more homogeneous diffuse axonal injury.
We compare primary motor cortex functional connectivity
in blast-related and non blast-related mild to moderate
TBI participants and controls with an orthopedic injury.
We find that in blast-TBI participants, subcortical
medial thalamic connectivity to primary motor cortex is
specifically increased compared to non blast-TBI
participants.
|
0813. |
A semi-automated fMRI
method to determine language lateralisation in neurosurgical
candidates
Karlene M Fraser1,2, Ruth O'Gorman2,3,
Jozef Jarosz4, Gareth Barker2, and
Jonathan Ashmore4
1Neuroimaging, South London & Maudsley NHS
Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom, 2Centre
for Neuroimaging Sciences, Institute of Psychiatry,
King's College London, London, United Kingdom, 3Centre
for MR Research, University Children's Hospital, Zurich,
Switzerland, 4Neuroradiology,
King's College Hospital, London, United Kingdom
Language fmri is becoming a standalone clinical
procedure for the pre-operative assessment of
neurosurgical patients, but one possible confound to the
interpretation of language fMRI is that the apparent (bi)laterality
of language regions depends heavily on the selected
statistical threshold. This study aims to develop a
simple, semi-automated post-processing method to
determine language lateralisation for presurgical fMRI
patients. Using this method, laterality index plots were
successfully generated for all participants and were in
agreement with expert neuroradiological assessment,
suggesting that this method provides a simple but robust
quantitative assessment of language laterality.
|
0814. |
Investigation of a drug
with potential fast-onset efficacy in affective disorders:
pharmacological MRI of the 5-HT2A receptor
agonist psilocyn in the rat.
Aisling Spain1, Alexandre Khrapitchev1,
Trevor Sharp2, Nicola R. Sibson1,
and Chris Martin1
1Gray Institute for Radiation Oncology and
Biology, University of Oxford, Oxford, Oxfordshire,
United Kingdom, 2Department
of Pharmacology, University of Oxford, Oxford,
Oxfordshire, United Kingdom
Existing pharmacological treatments for affective
disorders suffer from a lack of acute efficacy.
Hallucinogenic drugs are potentially useful as
treatments for depression and anxiety disorders, however
further investigation of their physiological effects is
necessary. To understand the acute effects of
hallucinogen administration in vivo, 4 male Sprague-Dawley
rats were administered the serotonin 2A receptor
agonist, psilocyn and underwent BOLD imaging. Increases
in BOLD signal were observed in prefrontal and
subcortical areas, in structures implicated in the
pathophysiology of mood disorders. These results
illustrate the utility of fMRI in screening drugs for
acute efficacy in mood disorders.
|
0815. |
Using Reliability to
Predict Validity in Clinical fMRI
Tynan Reid Stevens1, Steven D Beyea1,
Ryan CN D'Arcy1, and David B Clarke2
1IBD-Atlantic, NRC, Halifax, Nova Scotia,
Canada, 2QEII
Health Science Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
The accuracy of presurgical fMRI is inherently related
to the threshold method used to create the activation
maps. We aim to demonstrate that choosing thresholds
that optimize reproducibility leads to high
correspondence with the gold standard, cortical
stimulation (CS). Eleven patients were tested by
presurgical fMRI, and observed while CS was performed in
the operating room. Functional MRI maps were optimized
for reliability, and the distance from each CS point to
the nearest activated voxel was calculated. Reliability
optimization reduced the CS-to-fMRI distance by 1-8 mm
compared with traditional threshold methods.
|
0816. |
Limbic scars: Functional
and structural MRI reveal long-term consequences of
childhood maltreatment
Harald Kugel1, Anja Stuhrmann2,
Victoria Beutelmann2, Peter Zwanzger2,
Thomas Lenzen2, Dominik Grotegerd2,
Katharina Domschke2, Christa Hohoff2,
Patricia Ohrmann2, Jochen Bauer2,
Christian Lindner2, Christian Postert2,3,
Carsten Konrad4, Walter Heindel1,
Volker Arolt2, Thomas Suslow5, and
Udo Dannlowski2
1Department of Clinical Radiology, University
of Muenster, Muenster, NRW, Germany, 2Department
of Psychiatry, University of Muenster, Muenster, NRW,
Germany,3Department of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry, University of Muenster, Muenster, NRW,
Germany, 4Department
of Psychiatry, University of Marburg, Marburg, HE,
Germany, 5Department
of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University
of Leipzig, Leipzig, SN, Germany
Childhood maltreatment is a strong risk factor for the
development of depression and posttraumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) in later live. In this study, the
neurobiological bases of these associations were
investigated. Both, depression and PTSD have been
associated with increased amygdala responsiveness to
negative stimuli as well as reduced hippocampal gray
matter volume, therefore we speculated that childhood
maltreatment results in similar functional and
structural alterations in previously maltreated but at
present healthy adults. fMRI and voxel-based morphometry
were applied to investigate the alterations.
|
0817. |
Lateralization of temporal
lobe epilepsy using resting fMRI connectivity mapping
Victoria L. Morgan1, Hasan H. Sonmezturk2,
John C. Gore1, and Bassel Abou-Khalil2
1Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging
Science, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United
States, 2Neurology,
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United States
Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is a common form of
epilepsy in which seizures originate from the
hippocampus and adjacent structures. Resection of these
structures can effectively reduce or eliminate seizures
when onset is accurately lateralized. We investigated
resting fMRI connectivity from each hippocampus in
controls and TLE patients who were seizure free after
surgery. A network between the right hippocampus and the
ventral lateral nucleus of the thalamus was detected
that potentially distinguishes between patients with
left and right hippocampal seizure onset with high
sensitivity and specificity. If validated, this
technique may be practical to include in MRI presurgical
examinations.
|
|
|
Traditional
Poster Session - Neuro A |
|
Multiple Sclerosis & White Matter Disorders
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf. Click on
to view
the poster (Not all posters are available for viewing.)
Tuesday 8 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
16:00 - 18:00 |
|
|
0818. |
Histological Basis of
Diffusely Abnormal White Matter in Multiple Sclerosis:
Evidence for a Primary Lipid Abnormality
Cornelia Laule1,2, Vlady Pavlova1,
David K.B. Li2,3, Guojun Zhao2,
Piotr Kozlowski2, Anthony L. Traboulsee3,
and G.R. W. Moore1,3
1Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, University
of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 2Radiology,
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 3Medicine,
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Given the potential prognostic importance of non-lesional
white matter abnormalities in MS, histological studies
are warranted to elucidate the pathology underlying the
MRI-defined phenomena of diffusely abnormal white matter
(DAWM). Post-mortem MS brain was examined with
multi-echo T2 relaxation
and histological staining. DAWM showed substantial
decreases in myelin water fraction (-30%) and myelin
phospholipids (-29%, -24%), with much less involvement
of the myelin proteins (-11% to -5%). Lesions
demonstrated more severe abnormalities than DAWM, with
decreases in both myelin lipids and proteins. Our
findings are consistent with a primary lipid abnormality
that antedates myelin protein loss in DAWM.
|
0819. |
Total sodium concentration
is increased in lesions and normal appearing white matter in
Multiple Sclerosis
David Paling1, Bhavana Solanky1,
Frank Riemer1, Claudia AM Wheeler-Kingshott1,
Raju Kapoor1, David H Miller1, and
Xavier Golay2
1NMR Research Unit, Department of
Neuroinflammation, UCL Institute of Neurology, London,
London, United Kingdom, 2NMR
Research Unit, Department of Brain Repair and
Rehabilitation, UCL Institute of Neurology, London,
London, United Kingdom
Mapping total sodium concentration in multiple sclerosis
(MS) may be a useful method of assessing
pathophysiological processes including increase in
intracellular sodium concentration, and increase in
proportion of higher sodium concentration extracellular
fluid from axonal loss. We acquired total sodium
concentration maps in 10 patients with MS, and 6
controls. Increased sodium was seen in lesions as
compared to the normal appearing white matter (NAWM) in
MS (48.6mM vs 36.6mM, p<0.001) and in NAWM in MS as
compared to controls (38.1mM vs 35.5mM, P=0.09). Further
studies are underway to understand the
pathophysiological significance of these findings
|
0820. |
Combining SIENA and SIENAx
for improved quantification of grey and white matter atrophy
Mishkin Derakhshan1, Sridar Narayanan1,
D. Louis Collins1, and Douglas L Arnold1
1Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill
University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
We propose a novel technique for a more sensitive
measurement of tissue-specific atrophy by combining the
precise, longitudinal edge-displacement approach of
SIENA with the tissue classification feature of SIENAx.
The method is evaluated using (1) scan-rescan data and
(2) simulated atrophy data and (3) is applied to a
multi-centre relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis
dataset.
|
0821. |
Lesion Morphology at 7
Tesla MRI differentiates Susac Syndrome from Multiple
Sclerosis
Tim Sinnecker1, Jens Wuerfel2,3,
Thoralf Niendorf4, Friedemann Paul2,5,
Ilka Kleffner6, and Jan Dörr2,5
1NeuroCure Clinical Research Center,
Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Berlin,
Germany, 2NeuroCure
Clinical Research Center, Charité-Universitätsmedizin
Berlin, Berlin, Germany, 3Institute
of Neuroradiology, University of Luebeck, Luebeck,
Germany, 4Berlin
Ultrahigh Field Facility, Max Delbrueck Center for
Molecular Medicine, Berlin, Germany, 5Clinical
and Experimental Multiple Sclerosis Research Center,
Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany, 6Department
of Neurology, University of Münster, Münster, Germany
Clinical and paraclinical findings including MRI
findings at 1.5 T MRI in Susac syndrome often enough
overlap with respective findings in MS. In fact, many
patients with Susac syndrome are misdiagnosed as having
MS. Realizing the brilliant signal to noise ratio at 7
T, we here studied 4 patients affected with Susac
syndrome, and report substantial differences in both
deep white matter and corpus callosum lesion morphology
between Susac syndrome and MS. Our data i) suggest that
lesion morphology at 7T supports differentiation between
Susac syndrome and MS and ii) provide new insights into
the pathophysiological mechanism underlying Susac
syndrome.
|
0822. |
Quasar arterial spin
labelled MRI shows increase in white matter arterial transit
time and perfusion in MS
David Paling1, Esben T Petersen2,
Daniel J Tozer1, Claudia AM Wheeler-Kingshott1,
Raju Kapoor1, David H Miller1, and
Xavier Golay3
1NMR Research Unit, Department of
Neuroinflammation, UCL Institute of Neurology, London,
London, United Kingdom, 2University
Medical Center, Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands, 3NMR
Research Unit, Department of Brain Repair and
Rehabiliation, UCL Institute of Neurology, London,
London, United Kingdom
Alteration in cerebral blood flow (CBF) has been noted
in MS, however whether this represents change in
metabolic demand, or dysregulation of perfusion control
mechanisms is not established. We used the QUASAR
arterial spin labelling sequence which simultaneously
quantifies CBF and arterial transit time (ATT), the time
taken for labelled arterial blood to transit to the
capillaries, in patients with relapsing remitting MS and
healthy controls. Increase in white matter ATT (1.1 vs
0.94s, P=0.05) and CBF (20.4 vs 17.1 mls min-1, p=0.02),
and increase in grey matter ATT (0.99 vs 0.85s, p=0.05)
was seen in MS. These findings suggest alteration in
perfusion control in MS.
|
0823. |
Multi-modal post mortem
MRI at 7T to detect and quantify multiple sclerosis cortical
grey matter pathology
Olivier E. Mougin1, Niraj Mistry2,
Penny A Gowland1, Nikos Evangelou2,
and Klaus Schmierer3
1Sir Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance
Centre, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, Select,
United Kingdom, 2Institute
of Neuroscience, Nottingham, Select, United Kingdom, 3Barts
and The London School of Medicine & Dentistry, Blizard
Institute, Centre for Neuroscience & Trauma
(Neuroimmunology Group), London, United Kingdom
To explore their potential to detect cortical grey
matter pathology we acquired T2 weighted (T2w), T2*w,
double inversion recovery, phase-sensitive inversion
recovery, and magnetization transfer ratio using fixed
post mortem MS brain. Voxels of 0.35mm isotropic gave a
clear delineation of the grey matter, both non-lesional
and lesional. Our results suggest T2w and T2*w MRI are
currently the best techniques to detect cortical grey
matter lesions in post mortem MS brain.
|
0824. |
Brain morphometry in
late-infantile Metachromatic Leukodystrophy
Samuel Groeschel1,2, Christine i Dali3,
Philipp Clas2, Christiane Kehrer1,
Marko Wilke1,2, and Ingeborg Krägeloh-Mann1
1Department of Pediatric Neurology &
Developmental Medicine, University Children's Hospital,
Tuebingen, Germany, 2Experimental
Pediatric Neuroimaging, University Children's Hospital,
Tuebingen, Germany, 3Department
of Clinical Genetics, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen,
Denmark
Metachromatic Leukodystrophy (MLD) is a metabolic
disorder leading to demyelination and neurological
deterioration. We assessed cerebral gray and white
matter volume as well as the volume of demyelination in
relation to disease course, using a multispectral MRI
segmentation approach (T1w and T2w). Eighteen patients
with late-infantile MLD and 48 typically developing
children of the same age range (20-59months) were
analyzed. Interestingly, in MLD patients GM volume was
found to be reduced already early during disease course,
when their WM volume did not differ. Demyelination load
increased with disease duration and motor deterioration.
This may serve as reference for therapeutic
intervention.
|
0825. |
Multi-channel registration
of FA and T1-weighted images to standard space: patients
with Multiple Sclerosis
Eloy Roura1, Torben Schneider2,
Pankaj Daga3, Marc Modat3, Nils
Muhlert2, Jordi Freixenet1, Declan
Chard2, Sébastien Ourselin3,
Xavier Lladó1, and Claudia A M
Wheeler-Kingshott2
1Computer Vision and Robotics Group,
Department of Computer Architecture, University of
Girona, Girona, Spain, 2NMR
Research unit. Department of Neuroinflammation, UCL
Institute of Neurology, University College London,
London, United Kingdom, 3Centre
for Medical Image Computing, Department of Medical
Physics and Bioengineering, University College London,
London, United Kingdom
In this work, we tested the performance of 4D
multi-channel registration of T1-weighted (T1w) scans
and diffusion tensor (DT) data to standard space in
Multiple Sclerosis and healthy subjects. The Montreal
Neurological Institute (MNI) template was chosen as
target. We compared results with single-modality
registration (3D) to their corresponding template. For
healthy subjects the 4D multi-channel approach performed
as well as the 3D approach when co-registering T1w and
DT images to MNI atlas space independently. For patients
the multi-channel approach improved the co-registration
in the boundaries of the ventricles and also in the
cortex compared to the 3D approach.
|
0826. |
Histogram analysis of
Fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity: Distinguishing
Tumefactive Demyelinating Lesions from High-Grade Glioma
using DTI
B. LIU1, X. LIU2, W. TIAN3,
T. Zhu4, S. Ekholm5, and J. ZHONG4
1Electrical and Computer Engineering,
University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, University of Rochester, United States, 3Department
of Radiology, University of Rochester, Rochester, United
States, 4Imaging
Sciences, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, United
States, 5Department
of Radiology, University of Rochester
It is of significant clinical importance to
differentiate between Tumefactive demyelinating lesions
(TDLs)and high-grade gliomas(HGGs) to avoid surgical
biopsy. However, this goal is difficult to achieve by
conventional MR imaging alone. The objective of our
study is to determine retrospectively whether
quantitative histogram analysis of FA and MD values can
be helpful in distinguishing between TDLs and HGGs. We
compare the FA value and MD value for both enhanced
Tumefactive demyelinating lesions(TDLs) and enhanced
high grade glioma(HGGs) with the matched location.
Results showed that TDLs and HGGs could be
differentiated by using the histogram method.
|
0827. |
Decreased Creatine in NAWM
Suggest a Reduced Gliosis in Natalizumab Treated MS Patients
Anders Tisell1,2, Johan Mellergård3,4,
Olof Dahlqvist Leinhard1,2, Charlotte Dahle5,
Jan Ernerudh6, Magnus Vrethem7,
Anne Marie Landtblom3,4, and Peter Lundberg2,8
1Division of Radiological Sciences,
Department of Medicine and Health Sciences, Linköping
University, Linköping, Sweden, 2Center
for Medical Image Science and Visualization (CMIV),
Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden, 3Neurology,
Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine,
Division of Neuroscience, Linköping University,
Linköping, Sweden, 4Neurology
Clinic, UHL, County Council of Östergötland, Linköping,
Sweden, 5Clinical
Immunology, Department of Clinical and Experimental
Medicine, Linköping University, Linköping, 6Clinical
Immunology, Department of Clinical and Experimental
Medicine, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden, 7Neurology
and Clinical Neurophsiology, Department of Clincal and
Experimental Medicine, Linköping University, Linköping,
Sweden, 8Depts
of Radiation Physics, Linköping University and Radiation
Physics, UHL, County Council of östergötland, Linköping,
Sweden
Absolute quantitative magnetic resonance spectroscopy
was used for assessing the effects of natalizumab
treatment on the metabolism in normal appearing white
matter of MS patients. A significant change in creatine
concentrations during extended treatment (three years)
was observed. As creatine is more abundant in glia cells
than in neurons this change suggests a reduction of glia
concentration. Although higher concentrations of
myo-inositol, choline containing compounds and total
glutamine+glutamate were observed in the patients
compered to healthy controls, the concentrations did not
change in the patients as a consequence of the therapy.
|
0828. |
Automatic lesion detection
in white and grey matter using T1-weighted and FLAIR images
Javier González-Zabaleta1, Norberto Malpica1,
Ana Ramos2, Juan Álvarez-Linera3,
and Juan Antonio Hernández-Tamames1
1Neuroimaging lab., Center for Biomedical
Technology, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid and
Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Pozuelo de Alarcón, Madrid,
Spain, 2Hospital
12 de Octubre, Madrid, Spain, 3Hospital
Ruber Internacional, Madrid, Spain
Cortical lesions in multiple sclerosis are characterized
by simultaneous hiperintensity in FLAIR images and
hypointensity in T1 images. We have developed a method
for automatic lesion detection that includes tissue
segmentation correction, lesion detection and
quantification. We have evaluated the technique in a
study on Multiple Sclerosis, including 21 controls and
15 patients. All subjects were correctly classified with
our method. All the algorithms have been included in a
plugin for 3D Slicer.
|
0829. |
Cervical cord lesion
characterisation in Multiple sclerosis (MS): A pilot study
with application to MTR
Marios C Yiannakas1, Hugh Kearney1,
Olga Ciccarelli2, David H Miller1,
and Claudia A.M Wheeler-Kingshott1
1Neuroinflammation, UCL Institute of
Neurology, London, United Kingdom, 2Brain
Repair and Rehabilitation, UCL Institute of Neurology,
London, United Kingdom
This study proposes a pipeline from acquisition to data
analysis to characterise for the first time multiple
sclerosis lesions in the cervical cord from MR images
acquired with different contrasts. Proton density (PDw)
and T1-weighted (T1w) images are acquired. Lesions are
segmented using established methodologies. Magnetisation
transfer ratio (MTR) measurements of the lesions, normal
appearing white-matter (NAWM) and grey-matter (NAGM) are
obtained and compared with healthy controls. The mean
MTR of PDw lesions is very similar to the T1w lesions
but more lesional tissue is visible on the PDw images
than T1w.
|
0830. |
Strength of connectivity
to the anterior cingulate predicts processing speed in
Multiple Sclerosis
Katherine A Koenig1, Erik B Beall1,
Jian Lin1, Blessy Mathew1, Lael
Stone2, Robert Bermel2, Stephen
Rao3, Bruce Trapp4, Micheal D
Phillips1, and Mark J Lowe1
1Imaging Institute, Cleveland Clinic
Foundation, Cleveland, OH, United States, 2Neurological
Institute, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, OH,
United States, 3Schey
Center for Cognitive Neuroimaging, Neurological
Institute, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, OH,
United States, 4Neurosciences,
Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, OH, United
States
It has been shown that functional connectivity MRI
(fcMRI) from the anterior cingulate (ACC) shows
correlation with cognitive function in MS. In the
current study, fcMRI from the ACC for 47 MS patients and
24 healthy controls was correlated with performance on
the SDMT. In patients, SDMT performance was
significantly correlated with right ACC connectivity to
the left caudate (r = 0.55, p=0.00006) and inversely
correlated with right ACC connectivity to the left
medial frontal gyrus (r = -.64, p=0.000001). Controls
showed no significant correlations.
|
0831. |
1.5T versus 3.0T MRI
texture analysis in the normal appearing white matter of
multiple sclerosis patients
Yunyan Zhang1, and Luanne M Metz2
1Depts of Radiology and Clinical
Neurosciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB,
Canada, 2Dept
of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Calgary,
Calgary, AB, Canada
Ten MS patients were imaged at both 1.5T and 3.0T within
48 hours using identical MRI protocols. T2-weighted MRI
were corrected for non-uniformity and then were
co-registered between scanners. Pixel-wise MRI texture
was computed using polar Stockwell transform, from which
the texture of normal appearing white matter (NAWM)
regions were extracted. There was a similar pattern of
regional variability in NAWM structures between field
strength while texture heterogeneity was generally
greater at 3.0T. No texture laterality was seen between
bi-hemispheric NAWM. Texture analysis may be feasible at
different scanners with different field strength by
controlling for contralateral NAWM.
|
0832. |
Characterizing Normal
Appearing and Diseased White Matter in Multiple Sclerosis
Using Quantitative MRI
Janne West1,2, Anne Aalto2,3, J.
B. M. Warntjes2,4, Olof Dahlqvist Leinhard1,2,
Anne-Marie Landtblom2,5, Örjan Smedby2,6,
and Peter Lundberg1,2
1Department of Radiation Physics, Linköping
University, Linköping, Sweden, 2Center
for Medical Image Science and Visualization, Linköping,
Sweden, 3Division
of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Linköping
University, Västervik, Sweden, 4Department
of Clinical Physiology, Linköping University, Linköping,
Sweden, 5Department
of Neurology, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden, 6Department
of Radiology, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden
Subtle regions of diffuse signal intensity are often
seen in T2-weighted images of MS patients. These
regions, not attributable to normal appearing white
matter (NAWM) or WM-lesions are called dirty-appearing
white matter (DAWM). Recent studies have proposed that
these regions may be an important marker for disease
progression. In this study it was investigated if
quantitative MR could be used to identify DAWM in a
group of 10 MS patients. DAWM was compared to NAWM,
WM-lesions and healthy white matter in a control group.
This study indicates that DAWM may be a different
pathological process detectable by quantitative MRI.
|
0833. |
Cerebellar Peduncles
Intrinsic Damage in Multiple Sclerosis: Association With
Clinical Disabilty
Paolo Preziosa1, Maria A. Rocca1,
Sarlota Mesaros2, Elisabetta Pagani1,
Tatjana Stosic-Opincal3, Jelena Drulovic2,
Giancarlo Comi4, and Massimo Filippi1
1Neuroimaging Research Unit, Institute of
Experimental Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific
Institute and Vita-Salute San Raffaele University,
Milan, Italy, Italy, 2Clinic
of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, University of
Belgrade, Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 3Clinic
of Radiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of
Belgrade, Belgrade, Yugoslavia,4Department of
Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy, Italy
A voxel-wise analysis to diffusion tensor (DT) MRI
tractography and T2 lesions metrics of the middle (M)
and superior (S) cerebellar peduncles (CP) was applied
to quantify their structural damage in multiple
sclerosis (MS) patients and to assess its relationship
with clinical disability. Compared to healthy controls,
MS patients showed widespread diffusivity abnormalities
along these tracts, which were more pronounced in
clinically impaired patients. Compared to unimpaired
patients, patients with overall and cerebellar clinical
impairment had a higher probability of having T2 lesions
in CPs. MS-related clinical impairment is due to both
focal damage and diffuse white matter tract injury.
|
0834. |
Patterns of regional gray
matter atrophy associated to PASAT and SDMT performances in
relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis patients
Gianna Riccitelli1, Maria A. Rocca1,
Elisabetta Pagani1, Vittorio Martinelli2,
Marta Radaelli2, Andrea Falini3,
Giancarlo Comi2, and Massimo Filippi1
1Neuroimaging Research Unit, Institute of
Experimental Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific
Institute and Vita-Salute San Raffaele University,
Milan, Italy, Italy, 2Department
of Neurology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy,
Italy, 3Department
of Neuroradiology, San Raffaele Scientific Institute and
Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy, Italy
We assessed the correlation between the regional
distribution of gray matter (GM) atrophy and
performances at the symbol digit modalities (SDMT) and
paced auditory serial addition (PASAT) tests in 51
relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) patients.
PASAT scores were correlated with GM atrophy in the
caudate nuclei, the cerebellum and several regions
mainly located in the fronto-temporo-parietal lobes,
while SDMT scores were correlated with GM atrophy in the
left cingulum, the parietal lobes and the bilateral
cerebellum. The results suggest that deficits at SDMT
and PASAT are associated to distinct patterns of
regional distribution of GM atrophy in RRMS.
|
|
|
Traditional
Poster Session - Neuro A |
|
Brain Tumor Imaging: Diagnosis & Response to Therapy
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf. Click on
to view
the poster (Not all posters are available for viewing.)
Tuesday 8 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
16:00 - 18:00 |
|
|
0835.
|
Detection of Radiation
Therapy Induced Cerebral Microbleeds in Gliomas: Does High
Field Mean High Yield?
Wei Bian1,2, Christopher Hess1,
Susan Chang3, Sarah Nelson1,2, and
Janine Lupo1
1Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University
of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United
States, 2Joint
Graduate Program in Bioengineering, University of
California San Francisco & Berkeley, San Francisco, CA,
United States, 3Neurological
Surgery, University of California San Francisco
The goal of this study was to compare the detection of
radiation-induced cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) in glioma
patients between 3T and 7T and magnitude and SWI
reconstructions. Ten patients who received prior
radiation therapy were scanned using T2*-weighted
gradient-echo imaging at both 3T and 7T. Our results
showed that although the sensitivity of CMB
identification increases with field strength, the
heighted susceptibility artifacts present at 7T often
limited their detection. To achieve the highest
detection rate of CMBs for these patients, SWI should be
utilized even at 7T, and tumor location should be
considered when deciding field strength.
|
0836. |
Analysis of 1H
MRSI data of brain tumours using LCModel and
whole tissue representations
Felix Raschke1, and Franklyn Howe1
1Clinical Sciences, St George's University of
London, London, United Kingdom
This study takes forward recently published work using
the widespread analysis tool LCModel for the analysis of
2D MRSI data of gliomas. LCModel is designed to estimate
individual metabolite proportions by fitting a linear
combination of metabolite spectra to an in vivo MR
spectrum, but here is used to fit representations of
grade II and grade IV tumour spectra and normal white
matter. Colormaps and histograms are used to visualize
the fitted tissue proportions and allow the clear
discrimination of grade II and grade IV gliomas.
|
0837. |
Persistent Restricted
Diffusion Abnormalities in bevacizumab-treated Glioma
Patients: Relationship to Outcomes
Sandy Mong1, Ben M Ellingson2,
Timothy F Cloughesy3, Kim J Hyun4,
Albert Lai3, Phioanh Leia Nghiemphu3,
Leili Mirsadraei5, William H Yong5,
and Whitney B Pope4
1Radiology, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, United
States, 2UCLA, 3Neurology,
UCLA, 4Radiology,
UCLA, 5Pathology,
UCLA
The aim of this study was to characterize the evolution
and prognostic significance of persistent diffusion
restriction abnormalities in patients with malignant
glioma treated with bevacizumab. These patients
demonstrated greater time to progression, time to
survival from initiation of bevacizumab treatment and
overall survival compared to matched controls. Advanced
imaging correlated these diffusion signal abnormalities
with hypoperfusion and decreased activity on PET scans.
Histopathological examination of a resection specimen
confirmed necrosis in one patient. Thus, the presence of
diffusion restricted lesions in patients with malignant
glioma appears to reflect treatment effect rather than
hypercellular tumor in a majority of cases.
|
0838. |
Spinal cord MR
spectroscopy in neoplastic lesions
Andreas Hock1, Fuchs Alexander1,
Peter Boesiger1, Anke Henning1,
and Spyros S. Kollias2
1University and ETH Zurich, Institute for
Biomedical Engineering, Zurich, Switzerland, 2Institute
of Neuroradiology, University Hospital of Zurich,
Zurich, Switzerland
Single voxel 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS)
provides information about biochemical processes of
neuronal tissue which is complementary to conventional
MRI examinations and is therefore a promising tool for
investigation of various spinal cord pathologies. In
this work, a protocol for spinal cord MRS allowing
robust and high quality spinal cord acquisitions was
developed. The results show specific changes in the
metabolite fingerprint of tumor patients compared to
controls and patients suffering from multiple sclerosis.
|
0839. |
Characterization of Brain
Tumours with Spin-Spin Relaxation: Preliminary
Investigations Reveal Unique T2 Distribution Profiles
Cornelia Laule1,2, Thorarin A Bjarnason2,3,
Irene M Vavasour2, Anthony L Traboulsee4,
G.R. W. Moore1,5, David K.B. Li2,5,
and Alex L MacKay2,6
1Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, University
of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 2Radiology,
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 3Diagnostic
Imaging Services, Interior Health, Kelowna, BC, Canada, 4Medicine,
University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 5Medicine
(Neurology), University of British Columbia, Vancouver,
BC, Canada, 6Physics
& Astronomy, University of British Columbia, Vancouver,
BC, Canada
Our case study attempts to better define the
distribution of T2 components
in 3 different types of human brain tumours (glioblastoma,
oligodendroglioma, meningioma). We used a 48-echo T2 relaxation
sequence and employed no apriori assumptions about the
number of exponential components contributing to the T2 decay.
T2 relaxation
time was increased in tumour and each tumour showed a
distinct T2 distribution
profile. Tumours have complex and unique
compartmentalization characteristics and multi-echo T2relaxation
may be useful in evaluating different classes of brain
tumours on the basis of their T2 distribution
profile. Further study with a larger sample size is
warranted.
|
0840. |
Multivariate pattern
analysis of in vivo MR imaging parameters for detecting
transformations to a higher grade in patients with recurrent
low grade gliomas
Alexandra Constantin1, Llewellyn Jalbert1,
Adam Elkhaled2, Rupa Parvataneni2,
Annette Molinaro2, Joanna Phillips2,
Soonmee Cha2, Susan M. Chang2, and
Sarah J. Nelson2
1University of California, Berkeley,
Berkeley, CA, United States, 2University
of California, San Francisco
A multivariate diagnostic model was built to estimate
the probability that a recurrent low grade glioma had
progressed to a higher grade based on in vivo MR imaging
parameters. The model was able to discriminate between
recurrent low grade gliomas that upgraded versus those
that remained grade 2 with 93% cross-validation accuracy
and 84% bootstrapping accuracy, based on the 75th
percentile normalized choline height, the 25th
percentile recovery to baseline of the perfusion
susceptibility curve, the 75th percentile ratio of
choline to n-acetylaspartate height, and the maximum
choline height inside the T2 lesion.
|
0841. |
DSC-MRI PERFUSION IN HIGH
GRADE CEREBRAL TUMORS: SOLUTION OF LEAKAGE EFFECTS IN A
SIMPLE CLINICAL IMAGE PROCESSING PROTOCOL.
Guy Umberto Poloni1, Enrico Marchioni2,
Giovanni Magenes3, and Gloria Castellazzi4
1Neuroradiology, Fondazione "Istituto
Neurologico Casimiro Mondino" IRCCS, Pavia, PV, Italy, 2Neurology,
Fondazione "Istituto Neurologico Casimiro Mondino"
IRCCS, Pavia, PV, Italy, 3Bioengineering
Department, Universita' degli Studi di Pavia, Pavia,
27100, Italy, 4Bioengineering
Department, Universita' degli Studi di Pavia, Pavia, PV,
Italy
DSC-MRI represents the widespread approach in
neuroradiology for the PWI of cerebral tumors, limited
in its efficacy by the breakdown of the BBB associated
to high grade cerebral tumors. A multi-parametric
approach was adopted to overcome technical limitations
of the technique on 30 consecutive untreated patients
affected by glioma of grades ranging from II to IV. A
voxel-wise analysis of the perfusion T2* relaxivity
curves, adopting a higher number of parameters than
standard and an increasing level of sophistication of
the pre-analysis, was performed demonstrating an
improved sensitivity to cerebral hemodynamic
alterations, particularly in regions where BBB injury
occurs.
|
0842. |
Evaluation of a new
multimodality voxel-based imaging biomarker for therapeutic
response assessment in GBM
Benjamin Lemasson1, Thomas Chenevert1,
Theodore Lawrence2, Christina Tsien2,
Pia Sundgren3, Charles Meyer1,4,
Larry Junck5, Jennifer Boes1,
Jean-Christophe Brisset1, Stefanie Galbán2,
Timothy Johnson6, Alnawaz Rehemtulla1,
Brian Ross1, and Craig Galbán1
1Radiology, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor, Michigan, United States, 2Radiation
Oncology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan,
United States, 3Radiology,
University of Michigan, Ann arbor, Michigan, United
States, 4Biomedical,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United
States, 5Neurology,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United
States, 6Biostatistics,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United
States
The purpose was to evaluate the diagnostic performance
of MRI based T1 and rCBV maps analyzed using a new
multi-parametric response map (mPRM) base on a voxel-based
analysis for early chemoradiation response prediction in
patients diagnosed with high-grade gliomas. The
percentage change, PRM and mPRM techniques using T1 and
rCBVmap were used to assessed tumor response 1 and 3
weeks mid-treatment of 23 patients bearing glioma. mPRMT1+/rCBV- significantly
identified patients resistant irrespective of tumor
volume delineation and the time point mid-treatment
used. This new approach could become a powerful tool to
analyze multiparametric and/or multimodal data.
|
0843. |
Measurement of
2-hydroxyglutarate in gliomas by optimized 1H-MRS at 3.0 T
Changho Choi1, Sandeep Ganji1,
Abhishek Banerjee1, Ivan Dimitrov1,2,
Ralph DeBerardinis1, Craig Malloy1,
Bruce Mickey1, Robert Bachoo1, and
Elizabeth Maher1
1University of Texas Southwestern Medical
Center, Dallas, Texas, United States, 2Philips
Medical Systems
We report noninvasive measurement of an oncometabolite,
2-hydroxuglutarate, in gliomas by TE-optimized 1H-MRS at
3T in vivo. The PRESS TE was optimized, with numerical
and phantom analyses, as 97 ms for maximizing the 2HG
multiplet at 2.25 ppm. This method was applied in 19
glioma patients, together with short-TE PRESS (35 ms).
2HG was detectable by both methods, but CRLB was smaller
in the TE = 97 ms data than in the TE = 35 ms data. The
TE = 97 ms method, with properly-calculated basis sets,
may provide reliable detection of elevated 2HG compared
to the short-TE method.
|
0844. |
Early Serial Functional
Diffusion Mapping in Patients with Newly Diagnosed
Glioblastoma During Combined Chemoradiation and
Anti-angiogenic Treatment
Pavlina Polaskova1, Marco C. Pinho1,
Kyrre E. Emblem1, Jayashree Kalpathy-Cramer1,
Dominique Jennings1, Elizabeth Gerstner2,
A. Gregory Sorensen3, Alexander S.R.
Guimaraes1, and Tracy T. Batchelor2
1A.A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging
/ Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown,
Massachusetts, United States, 2Massachusetts
General Hospital Cancer Center / Harvard Medical School,
Boston, Massachusetts, 3Radiology,
Harvard Medical School
Serial graded functional diffusion maps (fDM) provide a
new insight into a glioblastoma patient’s response to
therapy. It is challenging to choose one early
time-point that would accurately predict the response to
therapy, because the timing of significant changes
(anti-vascular effect vs anti-tumor effect) is strongly
dependent on the type of therapy. By looking at multiple
time-points, our longitudinal assessment allows us to
show early trends rather than one-time imaging changes.
We found that continuous relative decrease in ADC at
early time-points as shown by longitudinal FDM is
associated with shorter survival.
|
0845. |
2-Hydroxyglutarate in
Gliomas with IDH Gene Mutation Using High Resolution 1H-NMR
Spectroscopy of Tissue Extracts
H-M. Baek1, I. Marin-Valencia1, T.
Mashimo1, Z. Zhao1, R.
DeBerardinis1, R. Bachoo1, C.
Malloy1,2, and E. Meher1
1UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas,
Texas, United States, 2VA
North Texas Health Care System
This study represents, to our knowledge, the first in
vitro measurements of absolute quantification of 2HG
levels in IDH1/2 mutated tumors using high resolution
1H-NMR spectroscopy. The levels of 2HG in this work had
a range of 0.55 - 3.51 mol/g
from seven glioma samples with IDH1/2 mutation (e.g., 3
WHO grade II and 4 WHO grade III). In addition, Glu
levels were found to be lower in IDH1/2 mutant tumors
compared to IDH1/2 wild type tumors (P < 0.0001). This
result may reflect that IDH mutations cause a decrease
in Glu and/or -ketoglutarate
production and an increase in 2HG.
|
0846. |
Contrast leakage in high
grade glioma measured with independent component analysis of
dynamic susceptibility contrast MRI
Peter S LaViolette1, Alex D Cohen2,
and Kathleen M Schmainda1,2
1Radiology, Medical College of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee, WI, United States, 2Biophysics,
Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, United
States
This study measures the difference between the two
separate contrast agent boluses in patients with
high-grade glioma using regions of interest (ROIs)
defined by a novel unbiased independent component
analysis (ICA) approach.
|
0847. |
Survival Analysis for
Apparent Diffusion Coefficient Measures in Children with
Embryonal Brain Tumours
Matthew Grech-Sollars1, Dawn E Saunders2,
Kim P Phipps3, Jonathan D Clayden1,
and Chris A Clark1
1Imaging and Biophysics Unit, UCL Institute
of Child Health, London, London, United Kingdom, 2Department
of Radiology, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children,
London, London, United Kingdom, 3Department
of Neuro-oncology, Great Ormond Street Hospital for
Children, London, London, United Kingdom
Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC) measures have been
shown to be related to tumour cellularity. We measured
the gradient change in ADC values from the oedema into
the tumour core (ATCT) in 58 children with embryonal
brain tumours and correlated this with survival. More
negative values of ATCT were found to be related to a
lower survival probability. ATCT was shown to be a
sensitive biomarker that correlated with survival in
childhood embryonal brain tumours.
|
0848. |
Ex-vivo infiltrative brain
tumor histologically correlates with decreased ADC and
increased rCBV as measured with functional diffusion and
perfusion maps
Peter S. LaViolette1, Melissa A Prah1,
Mona Al-Gizawiy1, Elizabeth J Cochran2,
Scott D. Rand3, Jennifer Connelly4,
Mark G. Malkin5, Wade M Mueller6,
and Kathleen M Schmainda7
1Radiology, Medical College of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee, WI, United States, 2Pathology,
Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, United
States, 3Radiology,
Medical College of Wisconsin, 4Neurology,
Medical College of Wisconsin, 5Neurology
& Neurosurgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, 6Neurosurgery,
Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, United
States, 7Radiology
and Biophysics, Medical College of Wisconsin
The aim of this study was to examine areas of
overlapping dark ADC and bright rCBV in a human case of
high grade glioma and compare to ex-vivo tissue acquired
following death in this case report.
|
0849. |
Predicting spatial
patterns of recurrence for glioblastoma using
multi-parametric MRI classification
Vanessa H. Clark1, Michel Bilello1,
Priyanka Bhatt1, Xiao Da1, Elias
Melhem1, Arastoo Vossough1, Ron
Wolf1, Christos Davatzikos1, and
Ragini Verma1
1Radiology, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA, United States
We aim to provide a spatial map of predicted tumor
recurrence in subjects with glioblastoma which can be
used to guide treatment towards improving quality of
life and survival. Using 14 subjects and 9 imaging
modalities, we use support vector machine classification
to generate a probability map representing tissue with
imaging characteristics similar to
recurring/non-recurring tissues. With average 97%
specificity, 27% sensitivity, and 0.79 AUC, these
probability maps show potential for multimodal imaging
and classification to predict patterns of tissues likely
to recur that are not obvious to the human eye,
including prediction of tumor recurrence at specific
time intervals.
|
0850. |
Correlation of MRI-OEF and
PET-OEF neuroimaging data for study of hypoxia in brain
tumors
Parinaz Massoumzadeh1, Hongyu An2,
Joshua Shimony1, Dhanashree Rajderkar1,
Anna Carlson1, Jon Christensen1,
Zhang Xiaodong2, Daniel Marcus1,
Keith Rich3, and Tammie Benzinger1
1Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology,
Washington University in St. Louis, School of Medicine,
St. Louis, MO, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, University of North Carolina, School of
Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC, United States, 3Neurosurgery,
Washington University in St. Louis, School of Medicine,
St. Louis, MO, United States
Cerebral hypoxia can potentially impact treatment
outcome and brain tumor patient survival. Preliminary
results of a non-contrast MR procedure for measuring
brain and brain tumoral OEF are presented and compared
with the results obtain using the noninvasive 15O-PET
technique. Although good correlation between OEF-MR and
OEF-PET is obtained, and both method show abnormality in
tumor area, some discrepancy between the two methods is
observed which requires further investigation.
|
0851. |
Comparision of 3D
pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling (PC-ASL) with
dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) perfusion MRI
Rakesh Kumar Gupta1, Rishi Awasthi1,
Prativa Sahoo2, Bhaswati Roy1,
Sanjay Behari3, Bal Kishan Ojha4,
Nuzhat Husain5,6, and Ram KS Rathore2
1Radiodiagnosis, Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate
Institute of Medical Sciences, Lucknow, India, Lucknow,
Uttar Pradesh, India, 2Mathematics
& Statistics, Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur,
Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India, 3Neurosurgery,
Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical
Sciences, Lucknow, India, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India,4Neurosurgery,
Chatrapati Sahu ji Maharaj Medical University, Lucknow,
Uttar Pradesh, India, 5Pathology,
Chatrapati Sahu ji Maharaj Medical University, Lucknow,
Uttar Pradesh, India, 6Pathology,
Ram Manohar Lohia Institute of medical Sciences, Lucknow,
Uttar Pradesh, India
Forty (27 male and 13 female; mean age=43 yrs) untreated
consecutive patients (25 high grades & 15 low grades on
histopathology) with a postoperative diagnosis of either
high or low grade glioma were imaged using 3D PC-ASL and
DCE MRI. On Student’s independent t-test, all the DCE
derived metrics except ve (p=0.29) were found to be
significantly higher in high grade as compared to low
grade glioma (p<0.001), whereas ASL derived CBF did not
show any significant differences (p=0.62). We conclude
that DCE-MRI proved to be superior in differentiating
high grade from low grade glioma as compared to 3D PC-ASL
technique.
|
0852. |
Predicting response to
hyperbaric oxygen radiotherapy treatment in high grade
gliomas using Magnetic Resonance Imaging techniques
Nuria Arias1, Jesús Pacheco-Torres1,
and Pilar López-Larrubia1
1Biomedical Research Institute, CSIC, Madrid,
Madrid, Spain
A variety of studies have reported a direct link between
low tumoral oxygenation and resistance to therapies.
Several treatments have been specifically developed to
modulate hypoxia in order to improve treatment success,
like breathing a gas with high oxygen content during
radiotherapy. It would be desirable to know a priori
those tumors sensitive to this modulation. In the
present work we use BOLD, sensitive to vascular
oxygenation and blood flow, and TOLD contrast, sensitive
to tissue oxygen level, to detect in a rat glioma model
those tumors that would improve their response to
radiotherapy by breathing pure oxygen during radiation.
|
0853. |
DTI based assessment of
which brain tumour patients are in need of presurgical
language fMRI
Soren Ravn 1, Mats Holmberg 2,
Preben Sorensen 3, Jens Brondum Frokjaer 1,
Thorkil Christensen 1, and Jesper Carl 4
1Radiology, Aalborg Hospital, Aalborg,
Nordjylland, Denmark, 2Oncology,
Aalborg Hospital, Aalborg, Nordjylland, Denmark, 3Neurosurgery,
Aalborg Hospital, Aalborg, Nordjylland, Denmark, 4Medical
Physics, Oncology, Aalborg Hospital, Aalborg,
Nordjylland, Denmark
|
0854. |
11C-methionine PET
parametric response map, but not conventional MRI,
corresponds to treatment response of WT1 immunotherapy for
recurrent malignant glioma.
Manabu Kinoshita1, Yasuyoshi Chiba1,
Akihiko Tsuboi2, Naoki Kagawa1,
Jun Hatazawa3, Haruo Sugiyama4,
Naoya Hashimoto1, and Toshiki Yoshimine1
1Neurosurgery, Osaka University Graduate
School of Medicine, Suita, Osaka, Japan, 2Cancer
Immunotherapy, Osaka University Graduate School of
Medicine, Suita, Osaka, Japan, 3Nuclear
Medicine and Tracer Kinetics, Osaka University Graduate
School of Medicine, Suita, Osaka, Japan, 4Functional
Diagnostic Science, Osaka University Graduate School of
Medicine, Suita, Osaka, Japan
Immunotherapy targeting the Wilms’ tumor 1 (WT1) gene
product is a promising treatment modality for patients
with malignant gliomas with reports of encouraging
results. It has become clear, however, that Gd-enhanced
MRI (Gd-MRI) does not reflect prognosis, thereby
necessitating a more robust imaging evaluation system
for monitoring WT1 immunotherapy. In order to meet this
demand, we have performed a voxel-wise parametric
response map (PRM) analysis of 11C-methionine PET
(Met-PET) in WT1 immunotherapy and compared the data
with the overall survival after WT1 immunotherapy
initiation (OSWT1). This study describes the limited
value of Gd-MRI and highlights the potential of voxel-wise
PRM analysis of Met-PET for monitoring treatment
response in immunotherapy for malignant gliomas.
|
0855. |
Spin- and Gradient-echo
PWI with correction for T1- and T2(*)-related contrast agent
extravasation effects
Heiko Schmiedeskamp1, Matus Straka1,
Thomas Christen1, Jalal B. Andre2,
Seema Nagpal3, Laurence Recht3,
Reena P. Thomas3, Michael E. Moseley1,
Greg Zaharchuk1, and Roland Bammer1
1Department of Radiology, Stanford
University, Stanford, CA, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA,
United States, 3Department
of Neurology and Neurological Sciences, Stanford
University, Stanford, CA, United States
Although multiecho sequences, such as Spin- And
Gradient-Echo (SAGE) EPI, are inherently insensitive to
T1-related CA extravasation effects, PWI processing can
be biased by R2*- and R2-leakage effects. In this study,
an approach used to correct for T1-effects was adjusted
to account for R2*- and R2-related extravasation
effects. The separation of ∆R2,e(*) from ∆R2,p(*) was
achieved through pharmacokinetic modeling of CA passage
through the brain. Hereby, a leakage constant ki was
derived, facilitating improved assessment of brain
tumors with DSC-PWI.
|
0856. |
Repeated Split Sample
Validation to Assess Logistic Regression Model of DTI in
Differentiating Glioblastomas from Brain Metastases
Sumei Wang1, Sang Joon Kim1,2,
Matthew R Voluck1, Ronald L Wolf1,
Donald M O’Rourke3, Harish Poptani1,
Elias R Melhem1, and Sungheon Kim4
1Radiology, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 2Radiology,
University of Ulsan Asan Medical Center, Seoul, Korea, 3Neurosurgery,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United
States, 4Radiology,
New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY,
United States
One hundred and twenty nine glioblastomas and 74 brain
metastases were included in this study. FA and MD were
measured from the enhancing and immediate peritumoral
region. FA values from the enhancing and immediate
peritumoral regions for glioblastomas were significantly
higher than those for brain metastases. Repeated split
sample validation confirmed that FA and MD from the
enhancing part is a robust model for the distinction
between glioblastomas and brain metastases.
|
0857. |
Diffusion Tensor and
Kurtosis metrics along the corticospinal tract in patients
with intracranial tumors show complex WM involvement
Danielle Van Westen1, Filip Szczepankiewicz2,3,
Markus Nilsson2, Freddy Ståhlberg2,
Jimmy Lätt1, and Pia C Sundgren3
1Center for Medical Imaging and Physiology,
Skane University Hospital, Lund, Sweden, 2Department
of Medical Radiation Physics, Lund University, Lund,
Sweden, 3Diagnostic
Radiology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden
The usefulness of DTI- and DKI-metrics along the
corticospinal tract (CST) for demonstrating white matter
(WM) involvement in patients with intracranial tumors
was evaluated by comparing estimates in patients and
healthy controls. Edema, displacement, and infiltration
of the CST significantly affected the metrics along the
CST in the vicinity of intracranial tumor in individual
patients. However, findings were complex and a larger
material is required to assess the sensitivity of DTI-
and DKI-metrics and possibly redefine the criteria for
the each type of WM involvement; patterns described for
visual assessment did not fully account for WM
involvement.
|
0858. |
Quantitative Magnetization
Transfer in Human Glioma
Gerard Thompson1, Sha Zhao1, Goeff
JM Parker1, and Alan Jackson1
1University of Manchester, Manchester, United
Kingdom
Quantitative magnetization transfer (qMT) has been used
to study white matter diseases. qMT bound fraction (f)
is considered to be a proxy of WM myelination. Since
glial tumors arise in and invade white matter, changes
in f may represent both affected white matter, and
diagnostic information about the solid tumor component.
Here we demonstrate that while f is not specific at
distinguishing glioma grade or subtype, it is sensitive
for the detection of solid tumor, and tumor and
age-related white matter change in vivo. We also
demonstrate that f can be derived accurately without the
need for B1 correction at 3T.
|
0859. |
Quantitative 2D chemical
shift imaging of glutamate in brain tumour patients
Bradford A Moffat1, Liubinas Simon2,
Katherine Drummond2, Andrew Morokoff2,
Terrence O'Brien3, Chris Kokkinos4,
and Patricia M Desmond1
1Radiology, University of Melbourne,
Parkville, Victoria, Australia, 2Surgery,
University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia, 3Neurology,
University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia, 4Radiology,
Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Victoria, Australia
Glutamate concentration in human brain tumours has been
quantified from 2D CSI PRESS imaging. We present HPLC
validation of this technique. A High Correlation with
HPLC data suggests 2D CSI is an excellent biomarker of
in vivo Glutamate concentrations.
|
0860. |
Spatial Proximity Between
Subventricular Zone and Glioma in Human Patients
Rong Wang1, Jiaqi Ma1, Bolang Yu1,
Ed X. Wu2, and Jian Yang1
1Department of Radiology, the First
Affiliated Hospital of Medical College, Xi'an Jiaotong
University, Xi'an, Shaanxi, China, 2Laboratory
of Biomedical Imaging and Signal Processing, The
University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
Although brain tumor stem cells (BTSCs) are demonstrated
in glioma, the origin of BTSCs remains controversial.
Neural stem cells (NSCs) reside in subventricular zone (SVZ)
which is the largest neurogenic region in adult brain.
So SVZ is considered to be the most likely source of
BTSCs. This retrospective study showed that gliomas
exhibited spatial proximity to SVZ when compared to
metastatic tumors, implicating and supporting the
possibility that the genesis of gliomas and brain tumor
stem cells may originate from the mutational NSCs in SVZ.
|
0861. |
Perfusion MRI accurately
guides the biopsy of tumor-rich tissue during Stereotactic
Biopsy
B. J. Mulligan1, I. S. Grunfeld1,
L. C. Baxter1, J. M. Eschbacher2,
A. C. Dueck3, S. Liu1, K. A. Smith4,
S. W. Coons2, J. E. Heiserman5, J.
P. Karis5, J. Debbins1, P. Nakaji4,
and L. S. Hu1,6
1Neuroimaging Research, Barrow Neurological
Institute, Phoenix, Arizona, United States, 2Neuropathology,
Barrow Neurological Institute, 3Biostatistics,
Mayo Clinic Arizona,4Neurosurgery, Barrow
Neurological Institute, 5Neuroradiology,
Barrow Neurological Institute, 6Radiology,
Mayo Clinic Arizona
Increasing the likelihood of collecting tumor-rich
samples during surgery would greatly help the diagnosis
and management of high grade gliomas (HGG). We examined
the utility of using Perfusion MRI (pMRI) to guide
stereotactic biopsy in cases of recurrent tumor. A pMRI
Fractional Tumor Burden (pMRI-FTB) was calculated from
the relative Cerebral Blood Volume to differentiate
between post-treatment radiation effect (PTRE) and HGG
recurrence. pMRI-FTB showed strong correlation with the
biopsy-derived histologic tumor fraction (r = 0.90),
indicating that this may be a useful method for guiding
surgical biopsies.
|
0862. |
Dynamic contrast-enhanced
quantitative simultaneous permeability and perfusion imaging
of human brain tumours with one-second temporal resolution
Erik S Poulsen1, Leif Ostergaard1,
Patricia M Desmond2, C Kokkinos2,
Kate Drummond2, and Brad Moffat2
1Center of Functionally Integrative
Neuroscience (CFIN), Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus,
Denmark, 2Department
of Radiology, University of Melbourne, Melbourne,
Victoria, Australia
Dynamic 3D contrast-enhanced imaging using a k-space
sharing technique (TWIST) permits whole brain coverage
with high special resolution at a temporal resolution of
~1 sec. Hence, simultaneous permeability and perfusion
imaging of brain tumours can be acquired without the
drawbacks of routinely used dynamic susceptibility
contrast (DSC) technique. Permeability and perfusion
measurements could serve as biomarkes of tumour grade
and patient outcome. If validated, tumour vasculature
pheno-typying using these biomarkers could be applied to
any solid tumour. Quantitative data from ~20 brain
tumour patients will be presented in comparison with
DSC.
|
0863. |
Quantitative Measurements
of Permeability and Blood Volume in Meningiomas using
Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast-Enhanced Perfusion Imaging
Sumei Wang1, Ronald L Wolf1,
Edward B Lee2, Harish Poptani1,
Elias R Melhem1, John YK Lee3, and
Sungheon Kim4
1Radiology, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 2Pathology
and Laboratory Medicine, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA, United States,3Neurosurgery,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United
States, 4Radiology,
New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY,
United States
The purpose of this study is to determine whether
permeability and rCBV measurements can help in
determining the histologic grade and subtypes of
meningiomas. Thirty-one meningiomas underwent DSC
studies. All the perfusion parameters including
corrected rCBV, uncorrected rCBV, Ktrans, Ve and Vp were
measured from the enhancing part of the tumor. Our
result showed that corrected rCBV is helpful in
differentiating atypical from typical meningiomas,
whereas Ktrans and Ve measurements are useful in
distinguishing different subtypes of meningiomas.
|
0864. |
Early perfusion changes in
patients with recurrent low-grade gliomas treated with
everolimus (RAD001) under a phase II clinical trial
Michael Wahl1, Christopher Kazu Williams2,
Janine Lupo2, Susan Chang3, Daphne
Haas-Kogan1, and Sarah Nelson2,4
1Radiation Oncology, University of
California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United
States, 2Radiology
and Biomedical Imaging, University of California, San
Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States, 3Neurosurgery,
University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco,
CA, United States, 4Bioengineering
and Theraputic Sciences, University of California, San
Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States
Everolimus is an inhibitor of mTOR, a molecule in a
signaling pathway activated in most low-grade gliomas
and known to have angiogenic effects. In this phase II
clinical trial, patients with recurrent low grade
gliomas are treated with everolimus and followed with
serial multimodal MRI while on treatment. We observe a
significant decrease in DCE perfusion MRI parameters,
including FBV (a measure of capillary density) and Kps
(a measure of vascular permeability). This represents
the first clinical demonstration of antiangiogenic
effects of everolimus, and raises the possibility that
perfusion parameters can be used as early markers of
treatment response.
|
0865. |
Comparisons of in vivo
physiological imaging and histological characteristics for
tissue samples from regions of gadolinium enhancing and
non-enhancing tumor from patients with GBM
Rupa Parvataneni1, Ramon Barajas1,
Annette Molinaro2, Gabriela Bourne1,
Emma Essock-burns1, Joanna Phillips3,
Soonmee Cha1, Susan Chang2, and
Sarah Nelson1,4
1Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University
of California, San Francisco, California, United States, 2Neurosurgery,
University of California, San Francisco, California,
United States, 3Pathology,
University of California, San Francisco, California,
United States, 4Bioengineering
and Therapeutic Sciences, University of California, San
Francisco
The purpose of this study was to obtain image guided
tissue samples from regions of suspected tumor in
untreated GBM patients and compare ex vivo
histopathology features with in vivo imaging biomarkers
in order to characterize enhancing (CE) versus non
enhancing (NE) tumor. Our study showed that DSC imaging
parameters were associated with more malignant histology
for CE regions, while DWI parameters were associated
with more malignant histology in regions of NE tumor.
These results are particularly important in delineating
tumor margins during the initial surgical resection and
in determining the optimal therapeutic interventions
during subsequent stages of the disease.
|
0866. |
MR imaging parameters are
indicative of malignant transformation for low grade gliomas
Llewellyn Jalbert1, Adam Elkhaled2,
Joanna Phillips3, Rupa Parvataneni2,
Soonmee Cha2, Susan Chang4, and
Sarah Nelson2,5
1Bioengineering and Therapeutic Sciences,
University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco,
CA, United States, 2Radiology
and Biomedical Imaging, University of California, San
Francisco, 3Pathology,
University of California, San Francisco, 4Neurosurgery,
University of California, San Francisco, 5Bioengineering
and Therapeutic Sciences, University of California, San
Francisco
Gliomas are heterogeneous, infiltrating tumors of the
central nervous system that include astrocytomas,
oligodendrogliomas, and mixed oligoastrocytomas. The
prognosis for these patients can vary significantly
depending on the grade of malignancy and histological
characteristics, as defined by the World Health
Organization (WHO). Previous studies have shown that ex
vivo spectroscopy can discriminate between upgraded and
non-upgraded lesions, but it there are significant
limitations that remain in the assessment of malignant
transformation using conventional MR imaging methods.
This study has applied advanced in vivo magnetic
resonance imaging and spectroscopy techniques to
characterize parameters that are associated with
malignant transformation.
|
0867. |
Automatic assessment of
high grade brain tumour tissue in MR images: What is tumour
and what radiation injury
Yaniv Gal1, Stephen Rose2,
Pierrick Bourgeat3, Nicholas Dowson3,
Zeike Taylor4, Michael Fay5, Paul
Thomas5, Olivier Salvado3, and
Stuart Crozier1
1School of Information Technology and
Electrical Engineering, University of Queensland,
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, 2Centre
of Clinical Research, University of Queensland,
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, 3CSIRO,
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, 4Department
of Mechanical Engineering, The University of Sheffield,
Sheffield, United Kingdom, 5Royal
Brisbane and Women’s Hospital, Brisbane, Brisbane,
Queensland, Australia
A method for automatic assessment of high grade brain
tumour tissue in MR images is presented. The aim of the
method is to differentiate between tumour tissue and
radiation injured tissue. The method is validated
qualitatively on two high grade brain cancer patients
and demonstrates high potential.
|
0868. |
Serial 3T Sodium MRI for
the Assessment Therapy Response in Brain Tumors
Vincent Lee1, Anthony DeAngelo2,
Jonathan Weimer3, Frank Lieberman4,
Denise Davis5, Yongxian Qian2, and
Fernando Emilio Boada2
1Radiology and Bioengineering, University of
Pittsburgh, Piitsburgh, PA, United States, 2Radiology
and Bioengineering, University of Pittsburgh,
Pittsburgh, PA, United States,3Bioengineering,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States, 4Neurology,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States, 5Radiology,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States
Sodium MRI changes in response to the proliferative
activity of brain tumors. In this work we demonstrate
the use of 3D sodium MRI for following chemotherapy in
brain tumor patients.
|
0869. |
Assessment of Intratumoral
Susceptibility Signals (ITSS) in Patients with newly
diagnosed Glioblastoma using Quantitative Susceptibility
Mapping (QSM)
Andreas Deistung1, Ferdinand Schweser1,
Sabine Heiland2, Martin Bendszus2,
Wolfgang Wick3, Jürgen Rainer Reichenbach1,
and Alexander Radbruch2
1Medical Physics Group, Department of
Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology I, Jena
University Hospital, Jena, Germany, 2Department
of Neuroradiology, University of Heidelberg Medical
Center, Heidelberg, Germany, 3Department
of Neurooncology, University of Heidelberg Medical
Center, Heidelberg, Germany
On susceptibility weighted images glioblastoma usually
exhibit a large amount of intratumoral susceptibility
signals (ITSS), enabling differentiation from other
enhancing brain lesions. However, it is still unknown if
these ITS signals correspond to calcium or blood
deposits. Therefore, this contribution assesses ITSS in
glioblastoma with quantitative susceptibility maps to
differentiate between calcium or blood deposits. ITSS
were classified as 80-100% hyperintense in 8 of 9
glioblastoma whereas only one of 9 glioblastoma was
classified as 60-80% hyperintense, indicating that ITSS
in glioblastoma originate from blood products. These
findings may improve the understanding of the
pathophysiology of glioblastoma.
|
0870. |
Imaging of Hypoxia in
recurrent GBM using 18F-fluoromisonidazole PET, MRI and MRSI
Yan Li1, Laleh Jalilian1, Youngho
Seo1, Dave Wilson1, Miguel
Pampaloni1, Henry Vanbrocklin1,
Michael Prados2, and Sarah J Nelson1,3
1Department of Radiology and Biomedical
Imaging, University of California, San Francisco,
California, United States, 2Department
of Neurosurgery, University of California, San
Francisco, California, United States, 3Department
of Bioengineering and Therapeutic sciences, University
of California, San Francisco, California, United States
The purpose of this study was to assess the correlation
between18F-fluoromisonidazole PET (18F-FMISO-PET)
parameters and those from MRI, including
perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI), diffusion-weighted
imaging (DWI) and magnetic resonance spectroscopic
imaging (MRSI) in patients with GBM for whom progression
was suspected. Three patients diagnosed with
glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) were studied at the time
of suspected progression. The relationship of the PET
parameters to the MRI-defined abnormalities was
examined. Elevated CBV and PH values were detected in a
region that corresponded with T/B>=1.1.
|
0871. |
Areas of necrosis can act
as a confounding factor in the functional diffusion map
(fDM)
Matthew Grech-Sollars1, Dawn E Saunders2,
Kim P Phipps3, Jonathan D Clayden1,
and Chris A Clark1
1Imaging and Biophysics Unit, UCL Institute
of Child Health, London, London, United Kingdom, 2Department
of Radiology, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children,
London, London, United Kingdom, 3Department
of Neuro-oncology, Great Ormond Street Hospital for
Children, London, London, United Kingdom
The functional diffusion map (fDM) has been suggested as
a tool for early detection of tumour treatment efficacy.
Theoretically, on its own, a change in size in necrotic
areas does not necessarily give an indication of whether
the tumour is responding well to treatment or not. We
analysed data from 11 patients with brain stem tumours
and built fDM maps of the necrotic regions of the tumour
from the ADC images. The fDM in necrotic areas did not
appear to correlate with survival. We hypothesize that
areas of necrosis can act as a confounding factor in the
fDM.
|
0872. |
Quantitative MR imaging of
brain tumors: A step forward?
Dita Wagnerova1, Vit Herynek1,
Alberto Malucelli2, Monika Dezortova1,
Josef Vymazal3, Dusan Urgosik4,
Martin Syrucek5, Filip Jiru1,
Antonin Skoch1,6, Robert Bartos2,
Martin Sames2, and Milan Hajek1
1Department of Diagnostic and Interventional
Radiology, Institute for Clinical and Experimental
Medicine, Prague, Czech Republic, 2Department
of Neurosurgery, JE Purkyne University and Masaryk
Hospital, Usti nad Labem, Czech Republic, 3Department
of Radiology, Na Homolce Hospital, Prague, Czech
Republic, 4Stereotactic
and radiation neurosurgery, Na Homolce Hospital, Prague,
Czech Republic, 5Department
of Pathology, Na Homolce Hospital, Prague, Czech
Republic, 6International
Clinical Research Center, St. Anne's University Hospital
Brno, Brno, Czech Republic
The specific correlation patterns between metabolic
values, mean diffusivity and T2 relaxation times based
on multivoxel analysis were observed for low and high
grade gliomas, lymphomas, recurrent lesions and tissue
changes by radiation/chemotherapy which enable not only
tissue differentiation (healthy tissue, edema, tumor
infiltrated edema, tumor; tumor recurrence vs. radiation
necrosis), but also tumor type differentiation.
Combination of several MR methods can be used for
quantitative description of tumors to improve the
outcome from MR examination of patients.
|
0873. |
Automatic classification
of high grade brain tumour MRI for improved resection and
therapy planning
Yaniv Gal1, Stephen Rose2,
Pierrick Bourgeat3, Nicholas Dowson3,
Zeike Taylor4, Michael Fay5, Paul
Thomas5, Olivier Salvado3, and
Stuart Crozier1
1School of Information Technology and
Electrical Engineering, University of Queensland,
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, 2Centre
of Clinical Research, University of Queensland,
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, 3CSIRO,
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, 4Department
of Mechanical Engineering, The University of Sheffield,
Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom, 5Royal
Brisbane and Women’s Hospital, Brisbane, Brisbane,
Queensland, Australia
A method for automatic classification of high grade
brain tumour MRI for improved resection and therapy
planning is proposed. The method is validated
qualitatively and quantitatively on MRI and FDOPA PET
images and is found to increase the sensitivity of
contrast enhanced MRI to high grade brain tumours.
|
0874. |
Reductions in blood volume
in normal white matter are found in glioma patients treated
with bevacizumab
Vishal Patil1, and Glyn Johnson1
1Radiology, NYU School of Medicine, New York,
New York, United States
DSC MRI measurements of relative cerebral blood volume,
referenced to normal appearing white matter (NAWM), are
frequently used in monitoring treatment response.
Bevacizumab is the first FDA approved anti-angiogenic
agent and has shown efficacy in glioma when used in
combination with conventional cytotoxic agents. In this
study we calculated NAWM CBV in three sets of patients
groups; 1) never received bevacizumab, 2) received
bevacizumab after initial diagnosis and 3) only after
reoccurrence. Results show significant reductions in
NAWM CBV after treatment with bevacizumab, suggesting
that care need be exercised in the use of rCBV
measurements to monitor treatment response.
|
0875. |
Probabilistic MR Atlases
of Biological and Interventional Phenotypes in Human Gliomas
Benjamin M Ellingson1, Timothy F Cloughesy2,
Whitney B Pope1, Taryar M Zaw1,
Phioanh L Nghiemphu2, Kourosh M Naeini1,
Robert J Harris1, and Albert Lai2
1Radiological Sciences, David Geffen School
of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, Los
Angeles, CA, United States, 2Neurology,
David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles,
CA, United States
Studies support tumor location as playing an important
role in prognosis, likely due to the genetic profile of
tumor precursor cells and the stage in the development
cycle that these cells transform (i.e. the glioma “cell
of origin”). However, identifying such glioma “cells of
origin” is still a major issue challenging the field of
neuro-oncology. In the current study we have constructed
“probabilistic atlases” specifying the most frequent
tumor locations on MR for more than 400 patients. These
atlases were stratified by different biological and
interventional phenotypes to provide new insight into
niche locations of specific glioma cells of origin.
|
0876. |
Using LCModel and
whole tissue representations for the classification of
single voxel 1H
spectra of paediatric brain tumours
Felix Raschke1, Nigel Davies2,
Martin Wilson2, Andrew Peet2, and
Franklyn Howe1
1Clinical Sciences, St George's University of
London, London, London, United Kingdom, 2Cancer
Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United
Kingdom
This study takes forward recently published work using
the widespread analysis tool LCModel for the direct
classification of single voxel 1H MR spectra of the
paediatric brain tumours Medulloblastoma (MDB),
Astrocytoma (AG) and Ependymoma (EPD). LCModel is
designed to estimate individual metabolite proportions
by fitting a linear combination of metabolite spectra to
an in vivo MR spectrum, but here is used to fit
representations of complete tumour spectra. The best
classification according to the highest estimated tumour
proportion in a leave-one-out analysis compared well to
previously published work with 100.0% and 87.7% for MDB
vs. AG and MDB vs. AG vs. EPD respectively.
|
0877. |
Tissue Sodium
Concentration in Pediatric Brain Tumors as Measured with
23Na MR Imaging: Initial Experience
Ashok Panigrahy1,2, Regina Jakacki3,
Rafael Ceschin1, Stefan Bluml2,4,
Yongxian Qian5, Fern Wasco1, James
Mountz5, Ian F. Pollack6, and
Fernando Boada5
1Department of Radiology, Children's Hospital
of Pittsburgh of UPMC, Pittsburgh, PA, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, Children's Hospital of Los Angeles, Los
Angeles, CA, United States, 3Pediatric
Hematology/Oncology, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh
of UPMC, Pittsburgh, PA, United States, 4Department
of Biomedical Engineering, University of So uthern
California, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 5Department
of Radiology, UPMC Presbyterian Hospital, Pittsburgh,
PA, United States, 6Department
of Neurological Surgery, Children's Hospital of
Pittsburgh of UPMC, Pittsburgh, PA, United States
It is possible to calculate soidum concentration within
a spectrum of pediatric brain tumors. Sodium MR imaging
in pediatric brain tumors may detect regional areas
within diffuse astrocytoma which may behave more
aggressive.
|
|
|
Traditional
Poster Session - Neuro A |
|
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf. Click on
to view
the poster (Not all posters are available for viewing.)
Tuesday 8 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
16:00 - 18:00 |
|
|
0878. |
DTI Investigation of
Short-term Plasticity in Amygdala and Hippocampus Induced by
Fear Conditioning
Abby Y. Ding1,2, Qi Li3,4, Iris Y.
Zhou1,2, Grainne M. McAlonan3,4,
and Ed X. Wu1,2
1Laboratory of Biomedical Imaging and Signal
Processing, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR,
China, 2Department
of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, The University
of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China, 3Department
of Psychiatry, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
SAR, China, 4Centre
for Reproduction Growth and Development, The University
of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
Fear conditioning (FC) is widely used to study the
neural basis of learning and memory. The pivotal role of
amygdala and hippocampus in memory formation and
consolidation is well documented. In vivo DTI was
employed in this study, voxel-based significant and
distinct FA changes were found in amygdala and
hippocampus, suggesting possible microstructural
up-regulating in amygdala versus down-regulating in
hippocampus 1 hour post-FC. Such changes reverted at 24
hr post-FC in various DTI indices. Our results indicated
that DTI could be sensitive to probe short-term
plasticity, and may provide insights for the accompanied
brain plasticity network after FC
|
0879. |
Brain Development and
Effects of Chronic Fetal Hypoxia in Neonatal Guinea Pigs:
DTI, T2 and Volumetric MRI at 9.4T
Jieun Kim1, In-Young Choi1,2,
Yafeng Dong3, Wen-Tung Wang4,
William Brooks1, Carl Weiner3, and
Phil Lee1,5
1Hoglund Brain Imaging Center, University of
Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, United States, 2Neurology,
University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS,
United States, 3Department
of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Kansas
Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, United States, 4Center
for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine, NIH/USUHS,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 5Molecular
and Integrative Physiology, University of Kansas Medical
Center, Kansas City, KS, United States
Chronic hypoxia during the gestation period (hypoxemia)
can cause the neuronal death and slow neural migration
in the developmental brain. This study aims to
investigate the effects of chronic fetal hypoxia on
postnatal guinea pigs in the developing brain
longitudinally using in vivo MRI of T2 maps, DTI and
volume measurements. DTI and T2 measurements suggest
delayed axonal myelination and tissue maturation during
development of neonatal guinea pigs that experienced
chronic fetal hypoxia.
|
0880. |
Evaluation of Vascular and
Functional Recovery in Focal Ischemic Rats Using Functional
MRI
Shiliang Huang1, Qiang Shen1, Fang
Du1, Yen-Yu I Shih1, and Timothy Q
Duong1
1Reseach Imaging Institute, University of
Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio,
TX, United States
Recovery of perfusion and/or diffusion abnormalities
does not necessarily indicate functional and metabolic
recovery in stroke. In this study, we developed a
protocol for combined diffusion, perfusion and
functional MRI to investigate transient focal ischemia
in rats during the acute and chronic phase. Quantitative
perfusion and diffusion imaging was performed and an
improved ISODATA cluster analysis was used to classify
normal, ischemic core and “diffusion-perfusion mismatch”
tissues. BOLD and CBF fMRI was used to evaluate the
hypercapnic and forepaw-stimulation responses in
different brain regions and in the forepaw somatosensory
cortices up to one month post-ischemia.
|
0881. |
Striatal fMRI of Focal
Ischemic Rat Brain
Yen-Yu Ian Shih1, Shiliang Huang1,
Fang Du1, and Timothy Q Duong1
1Research Imaging Institute, University of
Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio,
Texas, United States
The present study aimed to longitudinally investigate
the striatum function in two groups of stroke rats ¡V
20-min middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) and
45-min MCAO. Our results demonstrated that the CBV fMRI
reliably depicts striatal and cortical functions in
stroke rats and 20- min MCAO showed better functional
recovery. This technique has potential to longitudinally
investigate the functional reorganization and evaluate
treatment efficacy in the striatum of the same animal
after stroke.
|
0882. |
Restorative strength of
the remodeled vessels after transient focal cerebral
ischemia in rats: evaluation with BOLD MRI
Chien-Hsiang Huang1,2, Chiao-Chi V. Chen2,
Tiing-Yee Siow2, Fu-Shan Jaw1, and
Chen Chang2
1Institute of Biomedical Engineering,
National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, 2Institute
of Biomedical Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan
Vascular remodeling which restores oxygen and nutrient
supply to the affected tissues improves the prognosis of
stroke patient. Evaluating restorative strength of the
remodeled vessels after ischemic insult provides
important information to help guide the strategy of
follow-up therapy. Dilatability and oxygenation ability
of the vessels are the key characteristics that
determine the restorative strength. This study aimed to
explore the temporal changes of dilatability and
oxygenation ability after transient focal cerebral
ischemia in rats using BOLD MRI.
|
0883. |
Asphyxiation versus
Ventricular Fibrillation Cardiac Arrest and the effect on
Cerebral Blood Flow using ASL-MRI.
Lesley M Foley1, Tomas Drabek2,
Jason Stezoski2, T Kevin Hitchens1,3,
Robert S Clark2,4, Chien Ho1,3,
and Patrick M Kochanek2,5
1Pittsburgh NMR Center for Biomedical
Research, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, United States, 2Safar
Center for Resuscitation Research, University of
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States, 3Department
of Biological Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States, 4Department
of Pediatrics, Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States, 5Departments
of Critical Care Medicine, Pediatrics and
Anesthesiology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, United States
Cardiopulmonary arrest is associated with high mortality
and morbidity. In this study we examined if two
different insults, namely ventricular fibrillation
cardiac arrest (VFCA) and asphyxia cardiac arrest (ACA),
result in different spatial and temporal patterns of
cerebral blood flow (CBF), with the aim of tailoring
therapies specifically to the type of insults sustained.
The insults produced early transient hyperemia which was
significant in the ACA model, followed by significant
hypoperfusion particularly in the VFCA insult. While the
mechanisms are yet to be determined, our data suggest
that hypoperfusion may be an important therapeutic
target particularly for resuscitation following VFCA.
|
0884. |
Longitudinally
Characterization of Perfusion, Diffusion, and Cerebral
Vascular Reactivity in Nonhuman Primate (Baboon) Stroke
Hsiao-Ying Wey1,2, Ghazwan M Kroma3,
Jinqi Li2,3, M Michelle Leland4,
Lisa Jones4, and Timothy Q Duong2,3
1Department of Radiology, A. A. Martinos
Center for Biomedical Imaging, MGH/Harvard Medical
School, Charlestown, MA, United States, 2Research
Imaging Institute, University of Texas Health Science
Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States, 3Department
of Radiology, University of Texas Health Science Center
at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States, 4Department
of Laboratory Animal Resources, University of Texas
Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX,
United States
This study describes the development of a large
non-human primate (baboon) stroke model (permanent and
transient stroke) and the implementation of
multiparametric MRI protocols to characterize the
evolution of lesion volume, the perfusion-diffusion
mismatch, quantitative CBF and ADC changes, and cerebral
vascular reactivity. Improved understanding of the
lesion evolution and perfusion-diffusion mismatch in
clinically relevant model of stroke might provide
important information to better guide clinical
diagnosis, test novel interventions and improve
treatment time windows.
|
0885. |
Decreased Baseline
Microvascular Volume in Acute Ischemia Induces
Hemispherically Deficient Cerebrovascular Response to
Hypercapnia: MRI Study using Permanent MCAO rat model
Ji-Yeon Suh1, Woo Hyun Shim1,
Dong-Wha Kang2, Xiaoying Wang3,
Xiang Fan3, Jeong Kon Kim1,2,
Christian Farrar1, and Young Ro Kim1
1Athinoula A, Martinos Center for Biomedical
Imaging, Massachusettes General Hospital, Charlestown,
MA, United States, 2Asan
Medical Center, University of Ulsan, Seoul, Korea, 3Neurology
and Radiology, Massachusettes General Hospital, MA,
United States
In this study, in order to characterize the altered
vascular function in stroke brain, the relationships
between the hypercanpia-induced vascular responses and
the baseline vascular states are monitored using an
alternating GE/SE EPI in acute permanent MCAO rats. Our
results showed globally decreased cerebral responses in
ipsilesional hemisphere. Interestingly, the decrease of
baseline MVV in ipsilesional hemisphere was
considerable, which drastic change may alter the
cerebral hemodynamic properties, hence suppressing the
CO2 reactivity in the entire ipsilesional hemisphere.
Our results provide an important basis for understanding
the impaired cerebrovascular reactivity due to occlusion
of major cerebral arteries.
|
0886. |
Relationship between MRA-derived
pattern of artery occlusion and MRI-based tissue diffusion
and perfusion lesion in a rat embolic stroke model
Mark J Bouts1, Ivo A Tiebosch1,
Annette van der Toorn1, Jeroen Hendrikse2,
and Rick M Dijkhuizen1
1Biomedical MR Imaging and Spectroscopy
Group, Image Sciences Institute, University Medical
Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands, 2Radiology,
University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Utrecht,
Netherlands
In cerebral ischemic stroke, characterization of the
extent and location of vessel occlusion in relation to
the spatiotemporal development of ischemic lesions may
lead to improved diagnosis. Therefore, we aimed to
distinguish different patterns of occlusion of segments
of the Circle of Willis, measured with MRA, and
correlate these with acute ischemic lesions, measured
with diffusion- and perfusion-weighted MRI, in a rat
embolic stroke model. We found that occlusion of the
proximal segment of the middle cerebral artery (MCA.M1),
was most strongly associated with development of a large
acute ischemic lesion in cortical and subcortical
tissue, whereas occlusion of the internal carotid artery
in conjuction with incomplete occlusion of the MCA
reduced acute lesion growth.
|
0887.
|
Pharmacological-challenge
MRI reveals effects of the antibiotic minocycline on
neurovascular coupling: A combined phMRI and fMRI study
Duncan Jack Hodkinson1, John Gigg2,
Diana Cash3, Steve CR Williams3,
John-Francis William Deakin4, and Steve R
Williams1
1Imaging Sciences Research Group, University
of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom, 2Faculty
of Life Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester,
United Kingdom,3Institute of Psychiatry,
King's College London, London, United Kingdom, 4Neuroscience
& Psychiatry Unit, University of Manchester, Manchester,
United Kingdom
Minocycline is a safe, routinely prescribed
broad-spectrum antibiotic effective against neuro-inflammation
and oxidative cell stress. These actions may mediate the
beneficial effects of minocycline on negative symptoms
in schizophrenia. Here, we show that pre-administration
of minocycline induces widespread attenuation of the
ketamine-induced phMRI response. However, minocycline
also inhibited BOLD responses to electrical hindpaw
stimulation, though cortical local field potential
changes were still present. These findings are
consistent with pharmacologically-induced disruption of
neurovascular coupling. These results are interpreted in
the context of previous findings linking minocycline to
modulation of aberrant glutamate NMDA function.
|
0888. |
Contrast-Enhanced
Magnetization Transfer MRI at 9.4 T: Myelin Mapping in the
Central Nervous System of Living Mice
Takashi Watanabe1, Jens Frahm1,
and Thomas Michaelis1
1Biomedizinische NMR Forschungs GmbH am
Max-Planck-Institut für biophysikalische Chemie,
Göttingen, Germany
This work demonstrates the use of MnCl 2 and
Gd-DTPA to improve the white/gray matter contrast in
magnetization-transfer MRI (3D FLASH) of the brain and
spinal cord of living mice at 9.4 T. A systemic Mn 2+ administration
followed by an intraventricular Gd-DTPA administration
increased the white/gray matter CNR by 136%. At 60 m
isotropic resolution, myelinated fibers and layers were
delineated with the contrast agents, even within the
gray matter. The contrast enhancement can be explained
by its lower/higher concentration of the contrast agents
in the white/gray matter, with the extracellular space
in the white/gray matter estimated to be 15%/27%,
respectively.
|
0889. |
Differences in the
Evolution of Ouabain-Induced Stroke Between Immunocompetent
and Immunodeficient Mice as Detected by T2-weighted MRI
Agatha Lyczek1,2, Miroslaw Janowski1,2,
Jinyuan Zhou1,3, Jiadi Xu1,3,
Peter PC van Zijl1,3, Jeff WM Bulte1,2,
and Piotr Walczak1,2
1Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States, 2Institute
for Cell Engineering, Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD, United States, 3F.
M. Kirby Research Center for Functional Brain Imaging,
Kennedy Krieger Research Institute, Baltimore, MD,
United States
It is believed that leukocyte trafficking into the
central nervous system contributes substantially to
secondary brain damage, exacerbating the follow-up
effects of ischemia. Characterizing stroke lesions in
immunocompetent (balb/c) versus immunodeficient
(rag2-/-) mice may provide an important insight into
neuroinflammation in stroke. We characterized, with MRI,
the evolution of ouabain-induced stroke in balb/c and
rag2-/- mice, and we demonstrate that, although all mice
developed similar acute lesions, immunodeficient mice
dramatically improved by day five, while continued
deterioration was observed in immunocompetent animals.
|
0890. |
In vivo Chromium-enhanced
MRI of Normal and Injured Retinas
Kevin C. Chan1,2, Shu-juan Fan1,3,
Iris Y. Zhou1,3, and Ed X. Wu1,3
1Laboratory of Biomedical Imaging and Signal
Processing, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong
Kong, China, 2Department
of Ophthalmology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, United States, 3Department
of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, The University
of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong Kong, China
Chromium (Cr) has been used histologically to stabilize
lipid fractions in the retina, and is suggested to
enhance oxidizable lipids in brain MRI. This study
explored the feasibility, sensitivity and specificity of
in vivo chromium-enhanced MRI (CrMRI) of retinal lipids,
by determining its spatiotemporal profiles and toxic
effect after intravitreal Cr(VI) injection to normal and
injured adult rats. One day after 3£gL Cr(VI)
administration at 1mM to 100mM, the normal retina
exhibited a dose-dependent increase in T1-weighted
hyperintensity until 50mM. Time-dependently, significant
T1-weighted hyperintensity persisted up to 2 weeks after
10mM Cr(VI) administration. While CrMRI demonstrated
reduced Cr enhancement in hypoxic-ischemic-injured
retina, 3D-CrMRI of ex vivo normal eyes at isotropic
50£gm resolution showed at least 5 alternating bands
across retinal layers, with the outermost layer being
the brightest. This agreed with histology indicating
alternating lipid contents with the highest level in the
photoreceptor layer of the outer retina. While Cr(VI)
reduction may induce oxidative stress and depolymerize
microtubules, manganese-enhanced MRI after CrMRI showed
a dose-dependent effect of Cr toxicity on Mn uptake and
axonal transport along the visual pathway. These results
potentiated longitudinal CrMRI studies on retinal lipid
metabolism upon further optimization of Cr doses with
visual cell viability.
|
0891. |
Mapping of Oxygen By
Imaging Lipids relaxation Enhancement (MOBILE): Application
in a murine stroke model.
Julie Magat1, Caroline Vandeputte2,
Uwe Himmelreich2, Bénédicte F Jordan1,
and Bernard Gallez1
1Biomedical Magnetic Resonance Group,
Université Catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium, 2Biomedical
Nuclear - Magnetic - Resonance Unit, Katholieke
Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
Imaging brain tissue oxygenation shortly after an acute
ischemic stroke may help to aid in the selection of
patients who may still benefit from thrombolytic
treatment beyond conventional time-based guidelines.
There is a critical need for methods able to monitor
dynamically and noninvasively brain oxygenation. The aim
of the current work was to implement the MOBILE
technique, a method developed to map variations in
oxygenation based on the changes in the relaxation
properties of the tissue lipids by exploiting the higher
solubility property of oxygen in lipids than in water
(5), in a mouse stroke model.
|
0892. |
A Validation Study of
T2*-Weighted Signal Change of Oxygen Challenge as a
Biomarker of Penumbra
Fang Du1, Qiang Shen1, Shiliang
Huang1, and Timothy Q Duong1
1Reseach Imaging Institute, University of
Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio,
TX, United States
Mismatch of diffusion/perfusion by MRI has been used as
an estimate of the ischemic penumbra, but there are
large parts of the mismatch region appear not to at risk
and it was also reported that some of the apparent
diffusion coefficient reduction area can be salvaged by
early reperfusion. We hypothesis that T2*-weighted
signal change following oxygen challenge could be used
as an improved biomarker of penumbra. We tested this
hypothesis on transient (45 mins) focal ischemic rats.
|
|
|
Traditional
Poster Session - Neuro A |
|
Animal Models of Brain Disease Other Than Stroke
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf. Click on
to view
the poster (Not all posters are available for viewing.)
Tuesday 8 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
16:00 - 18:00 |
|
|
0893. |
Metabolic studies of
glucose transporter 2 knockout (RIPGLUT1GLUT2-/-) mice using
in vivo 1H
MRS and CASL
Hongxia Lei1,2, Frederic Preitner3,
Bernard Thorens3, and Rolf Gruetter1,3
1Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne,
Lausanne, Vaud, Switzerland, 2University
of Geneva, Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland, 3University
of Lausanne, Lausanne, Vaud, Switzerland
Glucose transporter isoform 2 (GLUT2), one of GLUTs, has
been suggested to involve in the glucose sensor
mechanism not only in pancreas but also in brain. How
GLUT2 affect brain metabolism remained not well
understood. We hypothesize that lacking GLUT2 in brain
could interfere brain glucose sensor mechanism thus
attenuate brain metabolism. In present study, we
explored both localized 1H MRS and CASL on GLUT2-/- mice
and their countertypes at 9.4T. While at euglyemia and
under isoflurane anesthesia, metabolic alterations were
consistently observed in hippocampus of GLUT2-/- mice,
such as elevated blood flow and selected metabolites
including taurine, myo-inositol and total creatine. The
observations suggested that GLUT2 indeed affect brain
tissue, i.e. hippocampus, substantially.
|
0894.
|
Intracellular Oximetry
Using In Vivo Fluorine-19 MRI as Biomarker of
Immunotherapeutic Response of Cytotoxic T Cells in Mouse
Glioma
Jia Zhong1,2, Masashi Sakaki3,
Hideho Okada3,4, and Eric T Ahrens1,2
1Department of Biological Sciences, Carnegie
Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, United States, 2The
Pittsburgh NMR Center for Biomedical Research, Carnegie
Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, United States, 3Brain
Tumor Program, Cancer Institute, University of
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States, 4Department
of Surgery, School of Medicine, University of
Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States
Immunotherapy using live cells is opening up new avenues
for brain tumor treatment with minimal damage to healthy
tissue. Noninvasive biomarkers of therapeutic efficacy
is of great importance for the evaluation of emerging
immunotherapies. In this study, we report the use of
intracellular perfluorocarbon (PFC) labeling of glioma
cells, combined with 19F T1 measurements, to assay
glioma oximetry. We show that glioma oxygen level
responds sensitively to the influx of therapeutic
cytotoxic CD8+ T cells into mouse glioma. We also show
that intracellular oximetry can detect the presence of
sparse CD8+ T cell numbers, even in the absence of
significant tumor shrinkage.
|
0895. |
Metabolite quantitation in
experimental demyelination model using in-vitro MRS: A pilot
study
Naranamangalam Raghunathan Jagannathan1,
Krithika Balasubramanian1, Uma Sharma1,
and Senthil S Kumaran1
1Department of NMR & MRI Facility, All India
Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, Delhi, India
The objective was to characterize and quantitate
metabolites in demyelinated rat brain tissues and
compare it with the normal tissues of control rats by
in-vitro 1H-MRS. Overall 28 metabolites were
unambiguously assigned. The concentration of N-acetyl
aspartate (NAA) reduced while that of alanine (Ala) and
taurine (Tau) increased in demyelinated tissues.
Decreased NAA is attributed to breakdown of myelin and
increased Tau is related to decreased signal
transmission across the demyelinated neurons. Ala serves
as a nitrogen carrier between glutamatergic neurons and
surrounding astrocytes and its increase may be
attributed to damage to these neurons leading to its
accumulation.
|
0896. |
Preserved Brain Metabolism
in Aging with Mitochondrial Mutation
Ai-Ling Lin1, Peter T Fox1, Holly
Van Remmen2, Andrew Bresnen1,
Anuradha Soundararajan1, Eric Muir1,
Arlan G Richardson2, and Timothy Q Duong1
1Research Imaging Institute, University of
Texas Health Science Center at San Anotnio, San Antonio,
TX, United States, 2Barshop
Institute for Logevity and Aging Studies, University of
Texas Health Science Center at San Anotnio, San Antonio,
TX, United States
Reduced mitochondrial function has been recently found
to be associated with increased lifespan in various
organisms. Herein we measured the effects on metabolism
in mouse brain of decreased mitochondrial function
induced by a genetic manipulation (Surf1 knock out)
which reduced levels of cytochrome c oxidase (COX).
Using non-invasive, in vivo neuroimaging, we quantified
metabolic function in Surf1 KO mice and WT controls.
Significant increases in glucose uptake and lactate
concentration (an index of glycolysis) were found in
both young (6-7 months old) and aged (17-18 months old)
adult Surf1 KO mice compared to age-matched WT controls.
Concentrations of essential neuronal metabolites (e.g.,
NAA and glutamate/glutamine) and energy substrates
(i.e., ATP) remained unchanged in Surf1 KO mice during
aging but decreased significantly in WT controls. Our
results suggest that decreased mitochondrial function
can mitigate age-related declines in brain physiology
and may provide an explanation for the extended lifespan
of Surf1 KO mice.
|
0897. |
In vivo longitudinal 1H
Spectroscopic Imaging and Diffusion Tensor Imaging studies
at 9.4T in a rat model of chronic liver disease
Cristina Cudalbu1, Valérie McLin2,
Olivier Braissant3, Nicolas Kunz1,4,
Yohan van de Looij1,4, and Rolf Gruetter1,5
1Laboratory for Functional and Metabolic
Imaging (LIFMET), Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de
Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Vaud, Switzerland, 2Département
de l'Enfant et de l'Adolescent, Unité de
Gastroentérologie, Hépatologie et Nutrition, Hôpitaux
Universitaires de Genève (HUG), Geneva, 3Laboratoire
de Chimie Clinique, Département de Pathologie et de
Médecine de Laboratoire, Centre Hospitalier
Universitaire Vaudois and University of Lausanne,
Lausanne, Switzerland, 4Division
of Child Growth & Development, University of Geneva,
Geneva, Switzerland, 5Departments
of Radiology, Universities of Lausanne and Geneva,
Switzerland
Chronic liver disease (CLD) is characterized by an array
of cognitive and fine motor deficits labeled as hepatic
encephalopathy. No in vivo longitudinal Spectroscopic
Imaging (1H-SI) or Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI)
studies were performed in CLD animal models. The aim was
to analyze the in vivo alterations in brain osmolytes
and brain edema using longitudinal 1H SI and DTI methods
at 9.4T. Our preliminary data show that in CLD before
the appearance of severe neurological signs, the osmotic
imbalance created by the continuous increase of Gln can
be compensated by a continuous decrease of other
osmolytes with minimal brain edema.
|
0898. |
Cerebral biochemical
pathways in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis and
effects of adjuvants: a metabolomic NMR spectroscopy study
Norbert W. Lutz1, Carla Fernandez2,
Jean-François Pélissier2, Patrick J. Cozzone1,
and Evelyne Béraud2
1CRMBM UMR CNRS 6612, Université
Aix-Marseille, Faculté de Médecine, Marseille, France, 2CRO2
UMR INSERM 911, Université Aix-Marseille, Faculté de
Médecine, Marseille, France
This metabolomic study contributes to our understanding
of the mechanisms involved in the induction of
Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis (EAE), the
animal model of Multiple Sclerosis. Effects of EAE-inducing
agents, Complete Freund's Adjuvant (CFA) and Spinal-Cord
Homogenate (SC-H), were determined by 1H
NMR spectroscopy of rat brain extracts. In both CFA and
CFA/SC-H-treated groups the phospholipid content, in
particular ethanolamine-containing phospholipids, and
glycolysis were increased. Among the osmolytes studied,
NAA and taurine were decreased, but not the astrocyte
marker, myo-inositol. Histological results suggest the
possibility of neuron shrinkage and mild gliosis
underlying these metabolic changes, but stress effects
are also to be considered.
|
0899. |
Longitudinal 1H MRS and
DTI in rodent fluid percussion brain injury model to study
cerebral metabolism, brain morphology and cognitive deficits
N. Agarwal1, L. D'Silva1, E. M.
Kan2, S. K. Verma1, S. Seramani1,
K. C. Ng2, E. A. Ling3, J. Lu2,
and S. Sendhil Velan1
1Laboratory of Molecular Imaging, Singapore
Bioimaging Consortium, Singapore, Singapore, Singapore, 2Combat
Care Laboratory, Defence Medical and Environmental
Research Institute, DSO National Lab, Singapore,
Singapore, 3Department
of Anatomy, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National
University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) can cause lasting
neuropsychological damage and impair the day-to-day
functionality for survivors. In this study, we have
investigated the changes in brain morphology, cognitive
function and metabolism affected by fluid percussion
injury in rodent models with Diffusion Tensor Imaging
(DTI) and Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS). The
current study demonstrates good correlation in results
obtained by DTI and 1H MRS to track white matter changes
in the traumatic brain injury model in rodents. This
suggests that regional cerebral changes in ADC and
NAA/Cr values may serve as a possible diagnostic marker
for cognitive performance after TBI.
|
0900. |
Metabolic changes in the
acute alcohol induced zebrafish brain
Dong-Cheol Woo1, Goo-Young Kim2,
Hyun-Joo Kim3, Eunjung Bang3,
Hyang-Shuk Rhim2, Sang-Young Kim2,
Do-Wan Lee2, Robert Lenkinski1,
and Bo-Young Choe2
1Department of Radiology, UT southwestern
medical center, Dallas, Tx, United States, 2The
Catholic university of korea, 3Korea
Basic Science Institute
Here we investigate the brain metabolism of zebrafish to
acute alcohol treatment by using the nuclear magnetic
resonance spectroscopy and the whole brain extraction.
Our results show that glutamate significantly decreased
in a quasi-linear dose dependent manner, scyllo-inositol
showed a smaller apparent increase only in the highest
acute dose group and myo-inositol showed a significant
decrease. We discuss the methodological novelty of our
work and theorize about the implications of the brain
neurochemcal changes from a behavioral perspective.
|
0901. |
Characterization of Optic
Nerve Development in Rhesus Monkeys with DTI
Yumei Yan1, Govind Nair2,
Longchuan Li2, Mark Wilson3,
Xiaoping Hu2, Mar Sanchez4,5, and
Xiaodong Zhang1,3
1Yerkes Imaging Center, Yerkes National
Primate Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA,
United States, 2Department
of Biomedical Engineering, Emory University and Georgia
institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, United States, 3Division
of Neuropharmacology and Neurologic Diseases, Yerkes
National Primate Research Center, Emory University,
Atlanta, GA, United States, 4Department
of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine,
Emory University, Atlanta, GA, United States, 5Psychobiology
Division, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory
University, Atlanta, GA, United States
Optic nerve plays a critical role in the visual pathway
and is nearly unmyelinated at birth. In this study,
diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) was employed to
characterize the optic nerve development in rhesus
monkeys from infant (2 weeks old) to adulthood (6 years
old). The progression of fractional anisotropy (FA),
mean diffusivity (MD), axial and radial diffusivity
followed an exponential trend, consistent with the white
matter development in human brains. Also, the time to
maturity of the diffusion parameters is comparable with
the previous reports on postmortem examination of rhesus
monkey optic nerves.
|
0902. |
Underlying tissue
pathologies of focal cerebral ischemia in rat examined using
diffusion MRI
Peng Sun1, Yong Wang1, Teng-Nan
Lin2, and Sheng-Kwei Song1
1Radiology, Washington University in St.
Louis, Saint Louis, MO, United States, 22Institute
of Biomedical Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan
DTI had been widely used to detect and characterize
axonal injury and demyelination. However, diffusion
parameters derived using DTI lose specificity and
sensitivity with increasing pathological and anatomical
complexity. Herein, diffusion basis spectrum imaging (DBSI)
was employed to address DTI limitations resolving
multiple-tensor water diffusion resulting from axon
injury, demyelination, and inflammation in a rat stroke
model of transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO).
The current results suggest that DBSI may be used to
more accurately reflect the underlying tissue
destruction.
|
0903. |
Quantification of Cerebral
Blood Volume using Breath Hold in Rat
Seon Joo Kwon1, Woo Hyun Shim1,
Bharat B Biswal2, and Young Ro Kim1
1Radiology, MGH, Charlestown, MA, United
States, 2Radiology,
New Jersey Medical School, Newark, NJ, United States
The typical CBV quantification strategy utilizes the
systemic administration of MR contrast agents. In the
current study, we propose to use breath hold (BH) and
the associated tissue MRI signal changes to bypass the
use of MR contrast agents and to enable the measurement
repeatability. We compared the voxelwise CBV values
acquired from the DSC (using Gd-DTPA) and BH methods in
normal rat brains (n=6). The results from two techniques
were significantly correlated, implicating that the BH
technique can be used as a tool for quantifying CBV in
replacement of traditional contrast agent methods.
|
0904. |
Along-tract
Characterization of Developing Rabbit Brain Using Diffusion
Tensor Tractography
Yu-Han Hong1, Yi-Wen Peng2,
Yeu-Sheng Tyan1,3, and Jun-Cheng Weng1,3
1School of Medical Imaging and Radiological
Sciences, Chung Shan Medical University, Taichung,
Taiwan, 2Department
of Veterinary Medicine, National Chung Hsing University,
Taichung, Taiwan, 3Department
of Medical Imaging, Chung Shan Medical University
Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan
Characterizing complex anatomy at different stages of
brain development not only aids in understanding this
highly ordered process but also provides clues to
detecting abnormalities caused by genetic or
environmental factors. Diffusion tensor tractography
allows for the in vivo delineation of white matter
tracts in the brain in a manner that is individualized
to the particular neuroanatomy of each subject.
Diffusion anisotropy and diffusivity change in some
brain regions with demyelinating disease and also with
neural development. However few studies identify these
changes along the white matter tracts. Therefore the
goal of this study was to characterize the changes of
quantitative diffusion indices along white matter tracts
in the developing rabbit brains. Along-tract method
analyzes the quantitative diffusion indices associated
with these virtual dissections in a way that is
parameterized along the curving axes of the tract
spines, instead of the more typical method of averaging
this variation into a single mean estimate for each
tract. In this study, DTI data of in vivo rabbit brains
(4 weeks to 40 weeks) were acquired and analyzed.
Fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), axial
diffusivity (AD), and radial diffusivity (RD) in the
regions of interest (ROIs) and along tracts were
generated and compared across the ages. In our results,
DTI tractography of the important white matter tracts,
such as hippocampus, corpus callosum, and olfactory
tract, showed refinement in regional tract architecture
with maturation. Both regional and along-tract diffusion
indices revealed these white matter tracts change during
mature period.
|
0905. |
Axonal Preservation of
FTY720 Assessed Using In Vivo Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Xiaojie Wang1, Joong Hee Kim2,
Jenet O'Neal3, Shawn O'Neal4, Joan
Brieland3, and Sheng-Kwei Song2
1Chemistry, Washington University, Saint
Louis, Missouri, United States, 2Radiology,
Washington University, Saint Louis, Missouri, 3Exploratory
Immunobiology, Pfizer Inc.,4Investigative
Pathology, Pfizer Inc.
In vivo DTI was performed on experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis (EAE) mice undergoing daily
prophylactic (immediately after immunization) and
therapeutic (immediately after disease onset) treatments
of FTY720 at 3 and 10 mg/Kg. Axon and myelin integrity
of lumbar segments was assessed using axial and radial
diffusivity. Prophylactic treatment significantly
reduced clinical scores of EAE mice while therapeutic
treatment was only marginally effective. However, both
treatments significantly preserved axon and myelin
integrity based on in vivo axial and radial diffusivity
measurements. The finding suggests that in vivo DTI may
detect treatment effect before neurological evaluation
responding to the disease modifying intervention.
|
0906.
|
High-field diffusion
tensor imaging characterization of cerebral white matter
injury in LPS exposed fetal sheep
Yohan van de Looij1,2, Gregory A Lodygensky1,
Justin M Dean3, Henrik Hagberg3,
Carina Mallard3, Petra S Hüppi1,
Rolf Gruetter2,4, and Stéphane Sizonenko1
1Division of Child Growth & Development,
University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland, 2Laboratory
for Functional and Metabolic Imaging, Ecole
Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne,
Switzerland, 3Perinatal
Center, University of Gothenburg, Göteborg, Sweden, 4Department
of Radiology, University of Geneva and Lausanne, Geneva
and Lausanne, Switzerland
Encephalopathy of prematurity is a major cause of
developmental disabilities in up to 75% infants after
preterm birth. The aim of this study was to characterize
the changes in the developing sheep WM following fetal
LPS exposure by MRI: T1W, T2W images and DTI as well as
histopathology correlation. The combination of lesions
observed in LPS treated fetal sheep mimics very well the
pattern of injuries seen in premature infants. We show
the excellent ability of DTI to classify different types
of brain lesions following LPS exposure with specific
changes of DTI derived between different lesions.
|
0907. |
Diffusion tensor imaging
for assessment of brain structural abnormalities in the
Mucopolysaccharidosis VII murine model
Manoj Kumar1, Ilya M Nasrallah1,
Sungheon Kim2, Ranjit P Ittyerah1,
John H Wolfe3,4, Stephen Pickup1,
and Harish Poptani1
1Radiology, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, 2Radiology,
New York University, New York, United States, 3Pathobiology
and Pediatrics, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, United States, 4Pediatrics,
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, United States
In-vivo and Ex-vivo diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) was
performed on 22 week old MPS VII (n=6) and wild-type
littermates (n=5) to assess abnormalities in the white
matter areas of MPS VII mice. DTI data was processed and
region of interest (ROI) analysis was performed from
different gray and white matter regions of the brain
using DTI studio software. Significantly reduced
fractional anisotropy (FA) in corpus callosum and
external capsule was observed in MPS VII affected mice
as compared to wild type indicating reduced myelination.
Luxol fast blue stains from these regions confirmed the
presence of less compact and myelinated fibers in MPS
VII brains. This preliminary data demonstrates the
utility of DTI in observing microstructural
abnormalities in brain of MPS VII mice. The study may be
helpful in understanding the pathology of MPS VII and in
assessing therapeutic response in these mice using DTI
as a surrogate imaging biomarkers.
|
0908. |
Noninvasive detection of
increased optic nerve cellularity in the DBA/2J mouse model
of glaucoma
Ravi Gottumukkala1, Tsen-Hsuan Lin1,2,
Yong Wang1, Keun-Young Kim3,
Won-Kyu Ju4, and Sheng-Kwei Song1
1Department of Radiology, Washington
University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, United
States, 2Department
of Chemistry, Washington University School of Medicine,
St. Louis, MO, United States, 3National
Center for Microscopy and Imaging Research and
Department of Neuroscience, University of California San
Diego, La Jolla, CA, United States, 4Hamilton
Glaucoma Center, University of California San Diego, La
Jolla, CA, United States
A novel approach, diffusion basis spectrum imaging
(DBSI), was used to noninvasively detect increased optic
nerve cellularity as well as axon and myelin injury in
the DBA/2J mouse model of glaucoma. DBSI-derived
estimations of cellularity correlated with DAPI counts
seen histologically (r = 0.86, p < 0.001). Axial and
radial diffusivity changes in the optic nerves of DBA/2J
mice were suggestive of axon and myelin injury,
respectively. As the role of glaucomatous optic nerve
gliosis is further elucidated, noninvasive
quantification of optic nerve cellularity using DBSI
could have clinical utility in diagnosis and prediction
of therapeutic responses in glaucoma patients.
|
0909. |
Longitudinal Diffusion
Tensor Imaging Evaluation of Connectivity Changes in Rabbit
External Capsules After Cerebral Hemisphere Radiation
Exposure
Chao-Yu Shen1,2, Wei-Ya Tseng1,
Chu-Wen Chang1, Hsi-Chang Chang3,
and Jun-Cheng Weng1,2
1School of Medical Imaging and Radiological
Sciences, Chung Shan Medical University, Taichung,
Taiwan, 2Department
of Medical Imaging, Chung Shan Medical University
Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan, 3Department
of Radiation Oncology, Chung Shan Medical University
Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan
Cognitive impairment and gait disturbance are the major
side effects of radiation-induced white matter injury.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been widely used as
a noninvasive modality for detection of brain lesions,
but the characterization of the normal brain tissue to
therapeutic dose radiation is still not well understood.
The aim of our study was to longitudinally evaluate
early-delayed radiation-induced changes of the brain
white matter in a rabbit model after a single sub-lethal
high dose irradiation (30 Gy) by using T2 weighted
imaging (T2WI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). To
quantify the diffusion anisotropy, fractional anisotropy
(FA), mean diffusivity (MD), axial diffusivity (AD), and
radial diffusivity (RD) were used. Results showed no
significant change on T2WI but continuing decrease
fractional anisotropy, early decreased axial diffusivity
and late increased radial diffusivity in the follow-up
time points. We suggested the DTI indices are more
sensitive than T2WI and can reflect pathologic changes
in radiation-induced brain white matter injury during
early-delay phase.
|
0910. |
DTI Detection of
Microstructural Changes Induced by Sleep Deprivation
Abby Y. Ding1,2, Iris Y. Zhou1,2,
Frank Y. Lee1,2, and Ed X. Wu1,2
1Laboratory of Biomedical Imaging and Signal
Processing, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR,
China, 2Department
of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, The University
of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep is believed to be
critical for memory consolidation. To probe the
microstructural changes after sleep deprivation (SD) in
vivo, REM-SD and DTI were employed in this study.
Significant axial, radial and mean diffusivity decreases
were found bilaterally in various locations in
hippocampus, suggesting specific layers of hippocampus
such as dentate gyrus and CA1 may be more susceptible to
SD. Significant FA, axial and mean diffusivity decreases
were also detected in cortex. Our results indicated that
DTI is sensitive for probing microstructural changes,
and can provide insights into the microstructural
plasticity associated with sleep and memory.
|
0911. |
Visualization of immune
cell dynamics in mouse brain with 11.7 T MRI
Yuki Mori1, and Yoshichika Yoshioka1
1Biofunctional Imaging, WPI IFReC, Osaka
University, Suita, Osaka, Japan
Non-invasive monitoring of immune cells before/after
neuroinflammatory conditions may lead to understand the
mechanisms of brain injury and repair. We try to
delineate the dynamics of immune cells in mouse brain
using intravenous superparamagnetic iron oxide particles
(SPIOs) enhancement. Intravenous SPIO-enhanced MRI has a
great possibility for visualizing the recruitments and
migrations of immune cells in mouse brain in
vivo, even in the normal brain. Immune cells in the
brain markedly increased in the inflammatory conditions.
Our technique could contribute to establish the
estimation method for treating brain injury and also
maintenance in normal condition that target immune
cells.
|
0912. |
Selective hippocampal
vulnerability to LPS-induced inflammation revealed by
multi-parametric MRI
Ana Belen Martin-Recuero1, Agnieszka
Krzyzanowska2, Pilar López-Larrubia1,
Carlos Avendaño2, and Sebastian Cerdán1
1Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas,
Alberto Sols, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones
Científicas, Madrid, Spain, 2Anatomy,
Histology & Neuroscience, Medical School, Autonoma Univ.
of Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Cerebral inflammation underlies the most prevalent and
morbid pathologies, including cancer and
neurodegeneration. A better understanding of
inflammation processes paves the way for more accurate
diagnoses and effective therapies. However, the imaging
signatures of inflammation remain elusive, being many
times difficult to discriminate from those derived from
the underlying pathologies. To this end, we report here
a longitudinal multi-parametric MRI characterization of
cerebral inflammation after the systemic administration
of lypopolisacharide (LPS). DWI, MT and T2 maps revealed
selective hippocampal and cortical damage one day after
the injection, increasing three days after in the
hippocampus but disappearing in the cortex.
|
0913. |
In Vivo Characterization
of Rabbit Eosinophilic Meningitis Caused by Angiostrongylus
Cantonensis
Hao-Hung Tsai1,2, Ling-Yuh Shyu3,
Chia-Ling Chi1, Hui-Chen Tsai1,
Hsueh-Lin Li4, and Jun-Cheng Weng1,2
1School of Medical Imaging and Radiological
Sciences, Chung Shan Medical University, Taichung,
Taiwan, 2Department
of Medical Imaging, Chung Shan Medical University
Hospital, Taichung, Taiwan, 3Department
of Parasitology, Chung Shan Medical University,
Taichung, Taiwan, 4School
of Medicine, Chung Shan Medical University, Taichung,
Taiwan
Angiostrongylus cantonensis (A. cantonensis) is a
parasitic nematode which causes Angiostrongyliasis, the
most common cause of eosinophilic meningitis in
Southeast Asia and the Pacific Basin. The roundworm
commonly resides in the pulmonary arteries and hearts of
rats, giving it the nickname the rat lungworm. Snails
are the primary intermediate hosts, where larvae develop
until they are infective. Humans are incidental hosts
and may become infected after ingestion of the worms in
raw snails from contaminated vegetables. The typical
clinical presentation is acute meningitis with an
eosinophilic pleocytosis frequently accompanied by
encephalopathy and other symptoms of central nervous
system (CNS). Patients usually present an insidious or
sudden onset of excruciating headache, neck stiffness,
nausea, vomiting and paraesthesia. The diagnosis of
eosinophilic meningitis can be arrived at through
detection of elevated cranial pressure and increased
volumes of eosinophils. The diagnosis of the cause of
eosinophilic meningitis and the presence of A.
cantonensis is remarkably more difficult. A spinal tap,
or a sample of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), must be taken
to search for A. cantonensis worms or larvae. A.
cantonensis is virtually undetectable in the CSF of half
of the infected individuals. Current methods of
detecting specific antigens associated with A.
cantonensis are also unreliable. Therefore, the purpose
of this study was to determine the longitudinal effects
of rabbit brain infected with 700 larvae of A.
cantonensis by advanced MRI techniques, and the results
were verified by histopathological study.
|
0914. |
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Detects Progressive Brain Damage in a Murine Model of
Chronic HIV-1 Infection
Michael D. Boska1, Mariano G Uberti1,
Prasanta Dash2, Santhi Gorantla2,
Larisa Y Poleuktova2, and Howard E Gendelman2
1Radiology, University of Nebraska Medical
Center, Omaha, NE, United States, 2Pharmacology
and Experimental Neurosciences, University of Nebraska
Medical Center, Omaha, NE, United States
A humanized mouse model of HIV infection which
replicates immune, virologic and neuropathologic
features of human HIV infection was used to evaluate
nervous system dysfunctions by diffusion tensor imaging.
Analyses of the cortical region of the whisker barrels
versus time over 16 weeks reveal mean absolute values of
FA and l remained
relatively unchanged, t increased,
and FA decreased, a time course which was similar to
unmanipulated controls. However, more careful analysis
of the time course by time linear regression of
individual results compared to virus levels reveal that
higher viral loads, associated with brain pathology,
reduced diffusivity and increased anisotropy.
|
0915. |
Cannabinoïd treatment
induces temporal biomechanical alterations in the juvenile
rat hippocampus
Simon CHATELIN1, Marie HUMBERT-CLAUDE2,
Valérie VILGRAIN1, Bernard E Van BEERS1,
Zsolt LENKEI2, and Ralph SINKUS1
1U773-CRB3, INSERM, Paris, France, 2Laboratoire
Neurobiologie et Diversité Cellulaire, ESPCI-CNRS,
UMR7637, Paris, France
This study shows for the first time a significant
temporal alteration of young rat brain mechanical
properties after cannabinoïd injection by in vivo
MR-Elastography. This effect is relevant in fiber-rich
regions and a modification of their axonal structures
can be supposed. It would confirm that CB1R receptors
may play an important role in the regulation of
structural plasticity and neuronal remodeling in the
postnatal brain with significant effects on brain
stiffness.
|
0916. |
Temporal assessment of
abnormal microvasculature in R6/2 transgenic mouse model of
Huntington's disease by BOLD contrast microscopic MRA
Chien-Hsiang Huang1,2, Chiao-Chi V. Chen2,
Sheng-Hsiou Hsu2, Fu-Shan Jaw1,
and Chen Chang2
1Institute of Biomedical Engineering,
National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, 2Institute
of Biomedical Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan
Cerebral microvascular aberrations are increasingly
recognized as a major disturbance in brain disorders,
including Huntington¡¦s disease (HD). To appreciate such
abnormalities, approaches sensitive to the detection of
small vessel changes are necessary. In this study, a new
3D microscopic magnetic resonance angiography was
developed based upon the intrinsic BOLD contrast. This
new method does not require the use of contrast agents
and thus is highly practical in the clinical settings.
We demonstrate herein the sensitivity and usefulness of
this new tool to longitudinally monitor the abnormal
microvasculature in mice with HD.
|
0917. |
SWIFT Imaging of Myelin
Loss in Traumatic Brain Injury in Rats
Lauri Juhani Lehto1,2, Alejandra Sierra1,
Curt Corum2, Djaudat Idiyatullin2,
Asla Pitkänen1, Michael Garwood2,
and Olli Gröhn1
1A. I. Virtanen Institute for Molecular
Sciences, University of Eastern Finland, Kuopio, Eastern
Finland, Finland, 2Center
for Magnetic Resonance Research, University of
Minnesota, United States
Many diseases involve myelin loss in white matter.
Myelin and myelin water has been related to short T2
components, that can be invisible to conventional MRI
sequences due to relatively long TE. SWIFT, an almost
zero acquisition delay sequence can detect these
components. SWIFT was used to study dysmyelination in
traumatic brain injury rat model ex vivo. Changes in TBI
animals were detected through normal, long T2 and
subtraction images. Although SWIFT does not have a TE,
it has been shown to have phase contrast that was also
investigated. White matter changes were detected in
several structures confirmed by histology.
|
0918. |
Pre-symptomatic Cerebellar
Lesions and Ventricle Enlargement in an EAE Mouse Model
revealed by Microscopic MRI
Stefano Lepore1,2, Helmar Waiczies1,2,
Jan Hentschel2, Jason M. Millward3,4,
Carmen Infante-Duarte3,4, Thoralf Niendorf2,4,
and Sonia Waiczies1,2
1Ultrahigh Field Imaging in
Neuroinflammation, Experimental and Clinical Research
Center (ECRC), a cooperation of the Charité Medical
Faculty and the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular
Medicine, Berlin, Berlin, Germany, 2Berlin
Ultrahigh Field Facility (B.U.F.F.),
Max-Delbrueck-Center for Molecular Medicine, Berlin,
Berlin, Germany, 3Experimental
Neuroimmunology, Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin,
Berlin, Berlin, Germany, 4Experimental
and Clinical Research Center (ECRC), Charité
Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Microscopic MRI enables the acquisition of highly
resolved images in a reasonable scan time, thereby
providing the possibility to perform in
vivo longitudinal
studies in animal models. In this study we have detected
and tracked early structural changes in brain tissue of
EAE mice prior to neurological symptoms. We were able
also to detect a significant enlargement of the
ventricles before disease onset and an increase in T2 relaxation
time of CSF after disease onset. Microscopic MRI and T2 maps
provide the opportunity to better understand the early
processes involved in the development of
encephalomyelitis.
|
0919. |
Trans-Blood-Brain Barrier
Drug Delivery via Ultrasound and Microbubbles for
Neurodegenerative Diseaseses
Michael Valdez1, Eriko Yoshimaru1,
Pier Ingram2, John Totenhagen1,
Aaron Forbes3, Stephen Moore1,
Paul Helquist3, Terry Matsunaga2,
Russel Witte2, Lars Furenlid2,4,
Zhonglin Liu2, Robert Erickson5,6,
and Theodore Trouard1,2
1Biomedical Engineering, University of
Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, United States, 2Radiology,
University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, United States, 3Chemistry,
University of Notre Dame, 4Optical
Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, United
States, 5Pediatrics,
University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, United States, 6Molecular
and Cellular Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson,
Arizona, United States
Treatment of neurological disorders is often hampered by
the inability of drugs to get across the blood-brain
barrier (BBB). Novel techniques have been developed that
use ultrasound in combination with microbubble contrast
agents to reversibly open up the BBB for drug delivery.
We have combined these techniques with high-resolution
-ray imaging to directly image the crossing of
radiolabeled beta-cyclodextrin, a promising new therapy
for Niemann-Pick type C disease, into the brains of mice
in vivo.
|
0920. |
Impact of contrast agent
osmolarity and dose on the quantification of blood-brain
barrier disruption in a DCE-MRI study
Dana S Poole1, Johannes R Sikkema1,
Julien Milles1, Matthias J.P. van Osch1,
Arn M.J.M. van den Maagdenberg2,3, and Louise
van der Weerd1,4
1Radiology, Leiden University Medical Centre,
Leiden, Zuid Holland, Netherlands, 2Human
Genetics, Leiden University Medical Centre, 3Neurology,
Leiden University Medical Centre, 4Anatomy
and Embriology, Leiden University Medical Centre
The purpose of this study was to investigate the impact
of the osmolarity and dose of the contrast agent (CA) on
the estimation of the BBB damage, to identify optimal
conditions for detecting low/uncertain BBB disruption
and to provide an improved protocol therefor. Two
different gadolinium-based contrast agents have been
employed for this purpose –
gadoliniumtetraazacyclododecanetetraacetic acid
(Dotarem®), and gadoteridol (ProHance®). A high CA dose
is required to ensure the visualization and
quantification of areas characterized by mild BBB
disruption, but a high osmolarity of the contrast agent
can aggravate BBB damage. Our optimized protocol
represents a combination of maximum dosage and
iso-osmolarity of CA.
|
0921. |
Dynamic Contrast Enhanced
MRI to Detect Vascular Injury in a Rat Model of Traumatic
Brain Injury
Matthew D Budde1, L. Christine Turtzo2,
Eric Gold2, Lindsay Janes3, Bobbi
Lewis3, and Joseph A Frank2,3
1Neurosurgery, Medical College of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States, 2Center
for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine, Bethesda,
MD, United States,3Clinical Center, National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States
We sought to investigate whether dynamic contrast
enhanced (DCE) MRI could be used to monitor BBB
disruption in a rat model of TBI and whether interferon
beta-1b, a drug that stabilizes the blood brain barrier
(BBB) and has anti-inflammatory properties, would be
effective. Although the BBB was severely disrupted
between 30 minutes and 7 days following injury, it did
not correlate with outcome, nor did interferon beta-1b
affect alter disease course. DCE effectively monitors
vascular injury following TBI, but significant
challenges remain in modulating the injury.
|
0922. |
The Role of SOD2 in a
Mouse Model of Multiple Sclerosis
Taeko Inoue1, Tabassum Majid2, Ann
Quick1, Christine Beeton1,2, and
Robia G Pautler1,2
1Molecular Physiology & Biophysics, Baylor
College of Medicine, Houston, TX, United States, 2Translational
Biology & Molecular Medicine, Baylor College of
Medicine, Houston, TX, United States
Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating disease of
the Central Nervous System. It is slow progressing and
ultimately results in debilitation of afflicted
individuals. It is characterized by periods of relapse
and remission of neurological symptoms that include
decreased vision, muscle weakness and coordination loss.
The etiology of MS is currently unknown, however, it is
understood that autoimmune mechanisms involving
elevations in reactive oxygen species are involved in
the development of lesions. As a result, we hypothesized
that lowering of ROS by overexpressing an antioxidant,
superoxide dismutase-2 in an EAE model of MS would
result in decreased EAE phenotype.
|
0923. |
Rapid in-vivo Imaging
of Amyloid Plaques Using -MRI
Gd-Staining and Ultrasound-Induced Blood Brain Barrier
Opening
Mathieu David Santin1,2, Thomas Debeir3,
Sharon Lori Bridal4, Thomas Rooney3,
and Marc Dhenain1,5
1Laboratoire des maladies neurodégénératives,
URA 2210 CEA/CNRS, Fontenay-aux-Roses, France, 2Centre
de NeuroImagerie de Recherche (CENIR), Institut du
Cerveau et de la Moëlle Epinière, Paris, France, 3Therapeutic
Strategic Unit Aging, Sanofi-Aventis, Chilly-Mazarin,
France, 4Laboratoire
d'Imagerie Paramétrique, UMR 7623 CNRS/UPMC, Paris,
France, 5MIRCen,
CEA / I2BM, Fontenay-aux-Roses, France
This work presents a new imaging technique for in
vivo detection
of amyloid plaques, the main lesions of Alzheimer's
disease. In transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer's
disease, we combined techniques based on MRI Gd-staining
method with transient opening of the blood brain barrier
thanks to ultrasound (US). The images obtained with our
new imaging protocol (US-Gd Staining) were compared with
our previously published reference protocol consisting
on an intracerebroventricular injection of an NMR
contrast agent (ICV-Gd-Staining). Our new protocol
allows in
vivo amyloid
plaque detection after an IV injection of an NMR
contrast agent.
|
0924. |
Sequential correlation of
relaxation times with motor functions in an experimental
model of demyelination
Krithika Balasubramanian1, Anjali Chauhan2,
Uma Sharma1, Senthil S Kumaran1,
Yogendra K Gupta2, and Naranamangalam R
Jagannathan1
1Department of NMR & MRI Facility, All India
Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, Delhi, India, 2Department
of Pharmacology, All India Institute of Medical
Sciences, New Delhi, Delhi, India
Sequential monitoring of motor activity was carried out
using four motor coordination tests in rats with
lysophosphatidyl choline induced demyelination during
different stages of the disease progression and
regression. The results were correlated with T1 and T2
relaxation times measured at 4.7 T which increased
during the progression of demyelination and subsequently
decreased and reached normal values during
remyelination. Activity on photoactometer, rotarod and
grip strength showed negative correlation with T1 and T2
while foot fault test showed a strong positive
correlation with the relaxation times. Thus MR
parameters aid in understanding the pathophysiology of
demyelination.
|
0925. |
A functional MRI study can
show neuronal pathway interruption by inserting acupuncture
needle in a dog model of Parkinson¡¯s disease
Geon-Ho Jahng1, Sung Ho Lee2,
Min-Ji Kim1, Hyug-Gi Kim1,
Chang-Woo Ryu1, Sun Mi Kim1, Dal
Mo Yang1, Dong Wook Sung3, Woo-Suk
Choi3, Il Whan Choi4, Chi-Bong
Choi3, and Hwi-Yool Kim2
1Radiology, Kyung Hee University Hospital at
Gangdong, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Seoul, Korea, 2Veterinary
Surgery, College of Veterinary Medicine, Konkuk
University, Seoul, Korea, 3Radiology,
Kyung Hee University Hospital, Kyung Hee University,
Seoul, Seoul, Korea, 4Meridian
and Acupuncture, Graduate School of Applied Eastern
Medicine, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea
To investigate the interruption of a neuronal pathway
during a passive moving task (PMT) by acupuncture
insertion at ST36 acupoint in the normal and
Parkinson¡¯s disease (PD) dog model, we developed a
novel method to model PD dog. 8 healthy beagle dogs were
divided into 2 groups of 4 dogs each, a normal control
and a PD model group. During fMRI, the PMT was performed
during three different sessions, which consisted of PMT
only (MO), PMT with inserting an acupuncture needle at
the ST36 acupoint (TA), and PMT with inserting the
needle at a sham point (SA).
|
0926. |
The Clinico-Radiological
Paradox in TMEV Induced Murine Models of MS
Istvan Pirko1, Jeffrey D. Gamez1,
Mihajlo Babovic2, Moses Rodriguez1,
and Slobodan I. Macura3
1Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic,
Rochester, MN, United States, 2Carleton
College, Northfield, MN, United States, 3Department
of Biochemistry, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United
States
The MRI-clinical paradox in MS refers to T2 weighted
lesion load showing poor disability correlation. The
reasons include non-specificity of T2 weighted lesions,
no consideration of lesion location, and insensitivity
to NAWM and NAGM pathology. We characterized 2 murine
models of progressive MS: in model (A), lesion load
developed linearly with strong disability correlation.
In model (B) disability correlation was poor in the
early (“tumefactive”) and strong in the late (“regular”)
stage. Brainstem lesion load correlated best with
disability in both models. These models are suitable for
future studies characterizing NAWM, NAGM and studies of
novel treatment strategies in MS.
|
0927. |
Multimodal MRI and PET
Imaging to Study Rat Model of Traumatic Brain Injury
Haiying Tang1, Asamoah Bosomtwi2,
shalini Jaiswal1, Sanjeev Mathur2,
Kimberley Byrnes3, and Reed Selwyn1
1Radiology, Uniformed Services University of
the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD, United States, 2Center
for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine (CNRM), HJF,
Bethesda, MD, United States, 3Department
of Anatomy, Physiology and Genetics, Uniformed Services
University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD, United
States
The present pre-clinical multi-modal imaging integrates
the emerging molecular imaging (PET) and MRI techniques
to assist the traumatic brain injury (TBI) research
using the rat model of TBI. We propose to investigate
the post-injury metabolism changes in injured brains
using the deoxyglucose (18F) (FDG) micro PET imaging
(mPET). MR imaging techniques including the
T1/T2/T2*/diffusion/perfusion MRI, susceptibility
weighted imaging (SWI), and MR spectroscopy (MRS). These
provide comprehensive information at the structural and
functional levels that can help us investigate imaging
markers of disease progression, white matter
degeneration, vascular abnormalities, and
micro-hemorrhages following TBI. PET and MR images are
spatially co registered. Correlations between changes in
glucose metabolism and MRI perfusion and diffusion in
various brain regions and in lesion and perilesional
regions in rats that undergo mild-moderate TBI are
investigated.
|
0928. |
Axonal degeneration in the
APP/PS1 mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease
Marianne Dorothea Keller1, Nyoman Kurniawan1,
Kerstin Pannek1, Stephen Edwards1,
Stephen Rose1, Maree Smith1,
Elizabeth Coulson1, and Ian Brereton1
1The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld,
Australia
The cholinergic hypothesis states that dysfunction of
acetylcholine containing neurons cause the cognitive
decline in Alzheimer's disease patients. This project
used tractography in a transgenic mouse model (APP/PS1).
The transgenic model develops a large Amyloid- plaque
load. We found significant changes due to axonal
degeneration of cholinergic fibres that have their
origin in the basal forebrain.
|
0929. |
Kainic acid induced
seizures spread from the cortex to the hippocampus after
traumatic brain injury
Joanna K Huttunen1, Antti M Airaksinen1,
Artem Shatillo1, Juha-Pekka Niskanen1,2,
Asla Pitkänen3,4, and Olli Gröhn1
1Department of Neurobiology, A. I. Virtanen
Institute for Molecular Sciences, University of Eastern
Finland, Kuopio, Finland, 2Department
of Applied Physics, University of Eastern Finland,
Kuopio, Finland, 3Dept.
of Neurobiology, Epilepsy Research Laboratory, A.I.
Virtanen Institute for Molecular Sciences, University of
Eastern Finland, Kuopio, Finland, 4Department
of Neurology, Kuopio University Hospital, Kuopio,
Finland
The aim of the study was to investigate the origin of
the kainic acid (KA) induced epileptic seizures after
traumatic brain injury (TBI) utilizing simultaneous
local field potential (LFP) and fMRI measurements. In
all animals, KA induced seizures caused detectable
responses in BOLD and LFP signals. The first epileptic
seizure elicited BOLD response initially in the cortex
before activating the hippocampus.
|
0930. |
Characterisation of rat
MAM model of schizophrenia by in vivo structural and
pharmacological MRI
Diana Cash1, Winfred Chege1,
Michel SB Mesquita1, Nadia N Malik2,
Mark D Tricklebank2, Michael J O'Neill2,
and Steven CR Williams1
1Neuroimaging, King's College London, London,
United Kingdom, 2Eli
Lilly and Co., United Kingdom
Serial structural MRI of rat MAM model of schizophrenia
was conducted until the rats were 1 year of age, showing
overall reduction in hippocampal and brain volumes, as
well as a reduction of cortical thickness.
Pharmacological MRI was conducted in aged rats at 12
months of age, showing a different response to an NMDA
antagonist ketamine in MAM rats vs. shams.
|
0931. |
Study of pH-sensitive
magnetization transfer imaging in hyperacute brain
infarction using a clinical 1.5 Tesla scanner
Taifeng Lin1, Maobin Wei1, Zhiwei
Shen1, Gang Xiao1, Renhua Wu1,
and Phillip Zhe Sun2
1Shantou University Medical College, Shantou,
Guangdong, China, 2Department
of Radiology, Athinoula A. Martinos Center for
Biomedical Imaging, Charlestown, MA, United States
pH-sensitive magnetization transfer (MT) imaging can
reflect the alteration in metabolism. Using this
technology to image ischemic brain may make an early
detection and prediction of ischemic penumbra. Twelve
male cats underwent permanent MCAO, and ischemic
evolution was observed at a clinical 1.5 T scanner
through clinical T1WI, T2WI, DWI and MT-imaging. We
found that in 5 of 12 animals hypointensity in occlusion
side was displayed on MT-imaging, when there was no any
alteration on the clinical images yet. In other 7 of 12
animals, we could observe the intensity alterations in
DWI and MT-imaging at the same time. We also found that
pH-sensitive MT-imaging was sensitive to detect
infarction prior to current clinical sequences and might
be able to predict ischemic penumbra.
|
0932. |
High-resolution and
parallel imaging of rat brain using a dedicated 3-D
orthogonal phased array coil at 3T
Zhigang You1, and Wingchi Edmund Kwok1
1Department of Imaging Sciences, University
of Rochester, Rochester, NY, United States
For rat brain MRI studies, clinical scanners offer the
advantages of reducing field inhomogeneity and
susceptibility artifacts associated with high-field
small-bored systems and the studies are more
translational for human applications. However, obtaining
sufficient SNR and resolution on clinical scanners is
challenging. Therefore, we developed a dedicated
3D-orthogonal phased-array receive coil for rat brain
imaging at 3T. Compared to a commercial 4cm surface
coil, our coil provides higher and more uniform signal,
significantly improving image quality and resolution.
Our coil is also compatible with parallel imaging to
reduce scan time. It should be useful for
high-resolution imaging of rat brain.
|
0933. |
Effect of hyperbaric
pressure on T1, T2, T2*, and Bo of the rat brain during MRI
Eric R Muir1, Damon Cardenas1,
Guang Li1, John Roby1, and Timothy
Duong1,2
1Research Imaging Institute, UT Health
Science Center, San Antonio, TX, United States, 2Ophthalmology,
UT Health Science Center
Oxygen has several effects on MRI signals including T1
shortening, T2/T2* BOLD effects from hemoglobin, and the
Bo field may be altered by paramagnetic oxygen. Oxygen
is increased under hyperbaric conditions which have been
used to treat various conditions, so MRI of subjects
within hyperbaric chambers may therefore be affected.
The goal of this study is to characterize the effects of
normobaric and hyperbaric conditions on T1, T2, T2*, and
Bo. These parameters changed only slightly, indicating
that MRI under hyperbaric conditions should not be
dramatically affected, paving the way for functional MRI
studies under hyperbaric pressure.
|
0934. |
Visualization of Mouse
Barrel Cortex using Ex-vivo Track
Density Imaging
Nyoman D. Kurniawan1, Zhengyi Yang1,
Kay Richards2, Fernando Calamante3,
Jeremy F.P. Ullmann1, Graham J. Galloway1,
Steven Petrou2, and David C. Reutens1
1Centre for Advanced Imaging, University of
Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, 2Florey
Neuroscience Institutes, University of Melbourne,
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 3Florey
Neuroscience Institutes, Brain Research Institute,
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
The functional organization, development and plasticity
of the barrel cortex are of great interest in
neuroscience. In this study, we present a novel method
using directional encoded color short tracks
track-density imaging (DECst TDI) to show the structure
of barrel cortex from ex-vivo samples.
|
0935.
|
Iron imaging using SWIFT
in a rat model of traumatic brain injury
Lauri Lehto1, Curtis Corum2,
Djaudat Idiyatullin2, Asla Pitkänen1,3,
Michael Garwood2, Olli Gröhn1, and
Alejandra Sierra1
1Department of Neurobiology, A. I. Virtanen
Institute for Molecular Sciences, University of Eastern
Finland, Kuopio, Kuopio, Finland, 2Center
for Magnetic Resonance Research and Department of
Radiology, University of Minnesota Medical, Minneapolis,
Minnesota, United States, 3Department
of Neurology, Kuopio University Hospital, Kuopio,
Finland
Intracranial hemorrhage is a consequence of traumatic
brain injury (TBI). Bleeding is the result of mechanical
damage, triggering secondary events, such as neuronal
hyperexcitability, toxicity, or inflammation. The
accumulation of blood in brain tissue results in high
iron content deposits, which are paramagnetic and
detectable by MRI. To study iron deposits after TBI, we
utilized SWIFT (sweep imaging with Fourier
transformation), that is an almost zero acquisition
delay pulse sequence using gapped frequency swept
pulses. Even though there is no time for phase
accumulation at k=0, as during a gradient echo, phase
behavior is still seen in the acquired data.
|
0936. |
Quantitative Examination
of Negative Spaces in a Crouzon/Pfeiffer Mouse Model at
Birth Using Multimodal Imaging
Susan M. Motch1, Thomas Neuberger2,3,
Neus Martínez-Abadías1, Talia L. Pankratz1,
Yingli Wang4, Ethylin W. Jabs4,
Timothy M. Ryan1, and Joan T. Richtsmeier1
1Department of Anthropology, The Pennsylvania
State University, University Park, PA, United States, 2Huck
Institute of the Life Sciences, The Pennsylvania State
University, University Park, PA, United States, 3Department
of Bioengineering, The Pennsylvania State University,
University Park, PA, United States, 4Department
of Genetics and Genomic Sciences, Mt. Sinai School of
Medicine, New York, NY, United States
We used µMR and µCT images of littermates of the
Fgfr2cC342Y/+ mouse model for Crouzon/Pfeiffer
syndromes, to investigate the global and regional impact
of this mutation on the developing negative spaces of
the head and skull at P0. Volumetric measurement using µMR
images indicated restriction of the nasopharynx of
Fgfr2cC342Y/+ mice (n=8) compared to non-mutant
littermates (n=11), but no difference in cochlear and
semicircular canal volume. Global and regional (cranial
vault, cranial base, facial skeleton) differences in
skull morphology were observed using configurations of
3D landmark coordinates measured on µCT isosurfaces in
Fgfr2cC342Y/+ mice (n=28) relative to non-mutant
littermates (n=31).
|
0937. |
Regional assessment of
Magnetization Transfer Ratio in the mouse brain - tracking
myelin change in a model of toxic demyelination.
Sveinung Fjær1,2, Stig Wergeland1,2,
and Lars Bø1,2
1The Norwegian Multiple Sclerosis Competence
Centre, Department of Neurology, Haukeland University
Hospital, Bergen, Norway, 2Department
of Clinical Medicine, University of Bergen, Bergen,
Norway
In multiple sclerosis and other demyelinating disorders
of the central nervous system assessment of change in
myelin content would be an important clinical tool.
Magnetization Transfer Ratio (MTR) is a semiquantitative
MR technique for detecting macromolecules, like myelin.
In this study we have developed a guided semi-automatic
method for detecting regional MTR change in the mouse
brain. By comparing MTR change to histopathology we show
that MTR can detect myelin change in several regions of
the mouse brain, including deep gray matter.
|
0938. |
Correlating quantitative
magnetization transfer (qMT) and diffusion tensor imaging
(DTI) with myelin histology in a rat model of type III
multiple sclerosis (MS) lesions
Vaibhav Anil Janve1,2, Zhongliang Zu1,
Song-yi Yao3, Ke Li1, Fang Lin
Zhang3, Kevin Wilson1, Xiawei Ou4,
Mark Does1,5, Subramaniam Sriram3,
and Daniel Gochberg1,2
1Institute of Imaging Science, Vanderbilt
University, Nashville, TN, United States, 2Department
of Physics, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United
States, 3Department
of Neurology, Vanderbilt University School of medicine,
Nashville, TN, United States, 4Department
of Radiology, Arkansas Children's Hospital, 5Radiology
and Radiological Sciences, Vanderbilt University
We present correlation of high-resolution 3D qMT and DTI
matrices with reconstructed quantitative 3D myelin
histology volume in a lipopolysacharide (LPS) mediated
animal model of MS. We seek to develop an animal model
system of type III oligodendrogliopathy which is seen in
the relative absence of prominent lymphocytic
infiltration. To our knowledge this is the first
quantitative magnetic resonance myelin study of an
animal model of Type III MS lesions. We find qMT
measured apparent pool size ratio (PSR) and DTI measured
radial diffusivity (RD) shows the strong correlation
with histological measure of myelin content.
|
0939. |
Increased Astroglial
Metabolism during Postnatal Development in Rat Brain
Puneet Bagga1, and Anant Bahadur Patel1
1NMR Microimaging and Spectroscopy, Centre
for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad, Andhra
Pradesh, India
There is a rapid increase in the number of neurons and
synapse formation in the brain during postnatal
development with glutamatergic and GABAergic neurons
undergoing large increases in neurotransmitter cycling
and oxidative energy metabolism. Whereas, no or little
information is available for astroglial activity during
this period. Male SD rats were studied at P10 and P30 by
infusing [2-13C]acetate and 1H-[13C]-NMR
Spectroscopy. In addition to remarkable neurochemical
changes, acetate utilization was found to be increased
by three folds at P30 indicating increased astroglial
activity during postnatal period.
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0940. |
Time-course and
high-resolution MRI in developing primate brain of common
marmoset
Keigo Hikishima1,2, Kazuhiko Sawada3,
Yuji Komaki1,2, Ayako Murayama2,
Kenji Kawai1, Nanako Sato1,
Takashi Inoue1, Toshio Ito1,
Suketaka Momoshima4, Hirotaka James Okano5,
Erika Sasaki1, and Hideyuki Okano2
1Central Institute for Experimental Animals,
Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan, 2Department
of Physiology, Keio University School of Medicine,
Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan, 3Tsukuba
International University, 4Department
of Radiology, Keio University School of Medicine, 5Division
of Regenerative Medicine, Jikei University School of
Medicine
The common marmoset, a small New World primate species,
has been widely used in neuroscience research. It is
essential to evaluate and characterize the brain
organization during pre- and post-natal development
non-invasively. However, little is known about either
brain morphology or even imaging techniques. We reported
time-course and high-resolution MRI of the developing
brain in the marmoset and advanced visualization in the
changes of cortical thickness and fiber structure of
commissure bundles using diffusion tensor imaging.
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0941. |
Does the brain fit the
skull? Fitting mouse skulls for size with combined MRI and
x-ray CT
Brian J Nieman1,2, Brian B Roman3,
Kathleen J Millen4, and R Mark Henkelman1,2
1Mouse Imaging Centre, Hospital for Sick
Children, Toronto, ON, Canada, 2Medical
Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada, 3Division
of Biological Sciences, University of Chicago, Chicago,
IL, United States, 4Center
for Integrative Brain Research, Seattle Children's
Hospital, Seattle, WA, United States
The mammalian brain and skull develop concurrently.
Large variations in one of these structures are
frequently accompanied by morphological changes in the
other. We use a combination of MRI and computed
tomography for deformation-based analysis of the brain
and skull in a mouse model of Dandy-Walker syndrome. We
show that the deformations between the average and
wildtype mice on the brain surface closely follow the
deformations seen on the inside of the skull. This
indicates a tight fit between brain and skull. These
tools will be important for assessing alterations or
disease where the concurrent development is interrupted.
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0942. |
Precise correlation of
relative cerebral blood volume and von Willebrand factor
stained histology using the HistToMRI toolbox
Peter S LaViolette1, Andrew C Discolo1,
Kimberly A Pechman2, and Kathleen M Schmainda1,3
1Radiology, Medical College of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee, WI, United States, 2Neurosurgery,
Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, United
States, 3Biophysics,
Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, United
States
We have developed a technique to precisely quantify and
compare histology to MRI on a voxel-wise basis. We
demonstrate its utility in a U87 rat brain tumor model,
where we compare relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV)
as measured with dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC)
MRI to ex vivo von Willebrand factor (vWF) expression.
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