Cardiovascular Effects on High Resolution 3D Multi-Shot Diffusion MRI of the Rhesus Macaque Brain: Cardiovascular effects on 3D-dMRI of the Macaque Brain
Abstract The monkey brain represents a key research model thanks to its strong homologies with the humans, but diffusion-MRI (dMRI) performed at millimeter-level resolution using clinical scanners and pulse-sequences cannot take full advantage of this. Cardiovascular effects on 3D multi-shot Echo-Pl...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Imaging neuroscience (Cambridge, Mass.) Mass.), 2023-11 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract The monkey brain represents a key research model thanks to its strong homologies with the humans, but diffusion-MRI (dMRI) performed at millimeter-level resolution using clinical scanners and pulse-sequences cannot take full advantage of this. Cardiovascular effects on 3D multi-shot Echo-Planar Imaging (3D-msEPI) dMRI were characterized at submilimetric resolution by comparing triggered and non-triggered diffusion-weighted (DW)-images and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) maps. We also investigated the value of 3D-msEPI with cardiovascular-triggering to achieve dMRI of the anesthetized macaque brain with high-resolution previously restricted to ex-vivo brains. Eight DW-images with voxel-size=0.5×0.5×1 mm3 and b-value=1500 s/mm2 were collected at 3 Tesla from two macaques using triggered and then non-triggered 3D-msEPI. Statistical analysis by mixed models were used to compare signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) and ghost-to-signal ratios (GSR) of DW-images with and without triggering. Brain DTI with isotropic-resolution of 0.4 mm and b-value=1000 s/mm2 was also collected in three macaques with triggered 3D-msEPI and reapplied without triggering in one. Cardiovascular pulsations induce inter-shot phase errors with non-linear spatial dependency on DW-images, resulting in ghost-artifacts and signal loss particularly in the brainstem, thalamus and cerebellum. Cardiovascular-triggering proved effective in addressing these, recovering SNR in white and gray matter (all p < 0.0001), and reducing GSR from 16.5±10% to 4.7±4.2% on DW-images (p < 0.0001). Triggered 3D-msEPI provided DTI-maps with the unprecedented spatial-resolution of 0.4 mm, enabling several substructures of the macaque brain to be discerned and thus analyzed in vivo. The value of cardiovascular-triggering in maintaining DTI-map sharpness and guaranteeing accurate tractography results in the brainstem, thalamus and cerebellum was also demonstrated. In conclusion, this work highlights the effects of cardiovascular pulsations on brain 3D-dMRI and the value of triggered 3D-msEPI to provide high-quality diffusion-MRI of the anesthetized macaque brain. For routine studies, 3D-msEPI must be coupled with appropriate techniques to reduce acquisition duration. |
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ISSN: | 2837-6056 |
DOI: | 10.1162/imag_a_00039 |