IN-VIVO TISSUE CHARACTERIZATION OF HUMAN BRAIN BY CHISQUARES PARAMETER MAPS - MULTIPARAMETER PROTON T-2-RELAXATION ANALYSIS

被引:23
作者
CHENG, KH
机构
[1] Physics Department, Texas Tech University, Lubbock
关键词
IMAGE ANALYSIS; HUMAN BRAIN; TISSUE CHARACTERIZATION; PROTON RELAXATION TIMES;
D O I
10.1016/0730-725X(94)91242-O
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 [临床医学]; 100207 [影像医学与核医学]; 1009 [特种医学];
摘要
The heterogeneous proton MR relaxation decay process in human brain has been investigated by performing region-of-interest and pixel-by-pixel calculations on the multiecho MR images with different repetition times (TR) of human brains using a clinical 1.5-T whole-body superconducting MR scanner. Based on the monoexponential, biexponential, and continuous gaussian distribution relaxation models, first-order proton relaxation parameters (proton density, T-1 and T-2) and higher-order transverse proton relaxation parameters (T-2-long, T-2-short, T-2-long fraction, T-2-average, and T-2-distribution width) were calculated. On the basis of an F test (p < .01), the statistical significance of the higher-order (biexponential and distribution) fits over the monoexponential fit was evaluated. Here, a significant improvement in the biexponential fit was found for some of the regions containing the ventricular cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) (T-2-long = 2780 +/- 570 ms; T-2-short = 159 +/- 42 ms; T-2-long fraction = 0.51 +/- 0.08 ms) due to the partial volume effect but not for most of the white matter (WM). On the other hand, an improvement of fit to WM was obtained when distribution (T-2-average = 80 +/- 8 ms; T-2-distribution halfwidth = 21 +/- 4 ms) as opposed to monoexponential (T-2 = 89 +/- 10 ms) fit was used. As internal controls, tubes of CuSO4 solution (T-2 = 1293 +/- 128 ms) and agarose gel (T-2 = 111 +/- 10 ms) which have similar T-2 values as the CSF and WM of the brain, respectively, were attached to the human head and imaged concomitantly. No significance improvements in either the biexponential or distribution fits over the monoexponential fit were found for all the controls. In addition to the first-order and higher-order relaxation parameter maps, the monoexponential chisquares, as well as the chisquares ratio (chisquares of the monoexponential fit divided by that of the higher-order fit), maps were also generated. Unlike the higher-order T-2-relaxation parameter maps, the chisquares parameter maps required no selection of any predetermined statistical confidence level. Therefore, these chisquares parameter maps provided a somewhat nonsubjective spatial profile of the heterogeneous transverse relaxation process in the brain. Our results led us to propose that the use of chisquares parameter maps, together with the first- and higher-order relaxation parameter maps, may further improve the in vivo tissue characterization capability of MRI in future clinical diagnosis and staging of intracranial diseases.
引用
收藏
页码:1099 / 1109
页数:11
相关论文
共 17 条
[1]
Gentry, Imaging of closed head injury, Radiology, 191, pp. 1-17, (1994)
[2]
Bezedek, Hall, Clark, Review of MR image segmentation techniques using pattern recognition, Med. Phys., 20, pp. 1033-1043, (1993)
[3]
Iwama, Yamada, Era, Sogami, Andoh, Sakai, Kato, Kuwata, Watari, Proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies on water structure in peritumorial edematous brain tissues, Magn. Reson. Med., 24, pp. 53-63, (1992)
[4]
Schad, Brix, Zuna, Harle, Lorenz, Semmler, Multiexponential proton spin-spin relaxation in MR imaging of human brain tumors, J. Comput. Assist. Tomogr., 13, pp. 577-587, (1989)
[5]
Armspach, Gounot, Rumbach, Chambron, In vivo determination of multiexponential T<sub>2</sub> relaxation in the brain of patients with multiple sclerosis, Magn. Reson. Imaging, 9, pp. 107-113, (1991)
[6]
Dumitresco, Armspach, Gounot, Grucker, Mauss, Steibel, Wecker, Multi-exponential analysis of T<sub>2</sub> images, Magn. Reson. Imaging, 4, pp. 445-448, (1986)
[7]
Conturo, Mitchell, Price, Beth, Partain, James, Improved determination of spin density, T<sub>1</sub> and T<sub>2</sub> from three-parameter fit to multiple delay-multiple echo (MDME) NMR images, Phys. Med. Biol., 31, pp. 1361-1380, (1986)
[8]
Poon, Bronskii, Henkelman, Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging parameters and their relationship to mammographic pattern, J. Natl. Cancer Inst., 84, pp. 777-781, (1992)
[9]
Cheng, Hernandez, Magnetic resonance diffusion imaging detects structural damage in biological tissues upon hyperthermia, Cancer Res., 52, pp. 1-8, (1992)
[10]
Cheng, Quantitation of non-Einstein diffusion behavior of water in biological tissues by proton MR diffusion imaging: Synthetic image calculations, Magn. Reson. Imaging, 11, pp. 569-583, (1993)