VICTR: Venous transit time imaging by changes in T 1 relaxation

Abnormalities in cerebral veins are a common finding in many neurological diseases, yet there is a scarcity of MRI techniques to assess venous hemodynamic function. The present study aims to develop a noncontrast technique to measure a novel blood flow circulatory measure, venous transit time (VTT),...

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Veröffentlicht in:Magnetic resonance in medicine 2024-07, Vol.92 (1), p.158-172
Hauptverfasser: Shi, Wen, Jiang, Dengrong, Hu, Zhiyi, Yedavalli, Vivek, Ge, Yulin, Moghekar, Abhay, Lu, Hanzhang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abnormalities in cerebral veins are a common finding in many neurological diseases, yet there is a scarcity of MRI techniques to assess venous hemodynamic function. The present study aims to develop a noncontrast technique to measure a novel blood flow circulatory measure, venous transit time (VTT), which denotes the time it takes for water to travel from capillary to major veins. The proposed sequence, venous transit time imaging by changes in T relaxation (VICTR), is based on the notion that as water molecules transition from the tissue into the veins, they undergo a change in T relaxation time. The validity of the measured VTT was tested by studying the VTT along the anatomically known flow trajectory of venous vessels as well as using a physiological vasoconstrictive challenge of caffeine ingestion. Finally, we compared the VTT measured with VICTR MRI to a bolus-tracking method using gadolinium-based contrast agent. VTT was measured to be 3116.3 ± 326.0 ms in the posterior superior sagittal sinus (SSS), which was significantly longer than 2865.0 ± 390.8 ms at the anterior superior sagittal sinus (p = 0.004). The test-retest assessment showed an interclass correlation coefficient of 0.964. VTT was significantly increased by 513.8 ± 239.3 ms after caffeine ingestion (p 
ISSN:0740-3194
1522-2594
DOI:10.1002/mrm.30051