On the assessment of cerebrovascular reactivity using hypercapnia BOLD MRI

Cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) reflects the capacity of blood vessels to dilate and is an important marker for brain vascular reserve. It may provide a useful addition to the traditional baseline blood flow measurement when assessing vascular factors in brain disorders. Blood‐oxygenation‐level‐dep...

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Veröffentlicht in:NMR in biomedicine 2009-08, Vol.22 (7), p.779-786
Hauptverfasser: Yezhuvath, Uma S., Lewis-Amezcua, Kelly, Varghese, Rani, Xiao, Guanghua, Lu, Hanzhang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) reflects the capacity of blood vessels to dilate and is an important marker for brain vascular reserve. It may provide a useful addition to the traditional baseline blood flow measurement when assessing vascular factors in brain disorders. Blood‐oxygenation‐level‐dependent MRI under CO2 inhalation offers a non‐invasive and quantitative means to estimate CVR in humans. In this study, we investigated several important methodological aspects of this technique with the goal of optimizing the experimental and data processing strategies for clinical use. Comparing 4 min of 5% CO2 inhalation (less comfortable) to a 1 min inhalation (more comfortable) duration, it was found that the CVR values were 0.31 ± 0.05%/mmHg (N = 11) and 0.31 ± 0.08%/mmHg (N = 9), respectively, showing no significant differences between the two breathing paradigms. Therefore, the 1 min paradigm is recommended for future application studies for patient comfort and tolerability. Furthermore, we have found that end‐tidal CO2 recording was useful for accurate quantification of CVR because it provided both timing and amplitude information regarding the input function to the brain vascular system, which can be subject‐dependent. Finally, we show that inter‐subject variations in CVR are of physiologic origin and affect the whole brain in a similar fashion. Based on this, it is proposed that relative CVR (normalized against the CVR of the whole brain or a reference tissue) may be a more sensitive biomarker than absolute CVR in clinical applications as it minimizes inter‐subject variations. With these technological optimizations, CVR mapping may become a useful method for studies of neurological and psychiatric diseases. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. We investigated methodological aspects of measuring cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) with BOLD MRI under 5% CO2 inhalation. We show that the CVR measured is identical across 4‐min and 1‐min inhalation duration of CO2 breathing. We also show that relative CVR (normalized against the CVR of the whole brain or reference tissue) may be a more sensitive biomarker than absolute CVR in clinical applications as it minimizes inter‐subject variations.
ISSN:0952-3480
1099-1492
DOI:10.1002/nbm.1392