4.4 Article

Use of dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI to measure subtle blood-brain barrier abnormalities

Journal

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
Volume 29, Issue 3, Pages 305-314

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.mri.2010.09.002

Keywords

Blood-brain barrier; MRI; Permeability; Stroke

Funding

  1. Row Fogo Charitable Trust
  2. Scottish Funding Council
  3. Chest Heart Stroke Scotland [ResFe1104]
  4. Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Executive [CZB/4/281]
  5. Wellcome Trust [075611]
  6. Medical Research Council [G0700704B] Funding Source: researchfish

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There is growing interest in investigating the role of subtle changes in blood-brain barrier (BBB) function in common neurological disorders and the possible use of imaging techniques to assess these abnormalities. Some studies have used dynamic contrast-enhanced MR imaging (DCE-MRI) and these have demonstrated much smaller signal changes than obtained from more traditional applications of the technique, such as in intracranial tumors and multiple sclerosis. In this work, preliminary results are presented from a DCE-MRI study of patients with mild stroke classified according to the extent of visible underlying white matter abnormalities. These data are used to estimate typical signal enhancement profiles in different tissue types and by degrees of white matter abnormality. The effect of scanner noise, drift and different intrinsic tissue properties on signal enhancement data is also investigated and the likely implications for interpreting the enhancement profiles are discussed. No significant differences in average signal enhancement or contrast agent concentration were observed between patients with different degrees of white matter abnormality, although there was a trend towards greater signal enhancement with more abnormal white matter. Furthermore, the results suggest that many of the factors considered introduce uncertainty of a similar magnitude to expected effect sizes, making it unclear whether differences in signal enhancement are truly reflective of an underlying BBB abnormality or due to an unrelated effect. As the ultimate aim is to achieve a reliable quantification of BBB function in subtle disorders, this study highlights the factors which may influence signal enhancement and suggests that further work is required to address the challenging problems of quantifying contrast agent concentration in healthy and diseased living human tissue and of establishing a suitable model to enable quantification of relevant physiological parameters. Meanwhile, it is essential that future studies use an appropriate control group to minimize these influences. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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