4.6 Article

Magnetic resonance elastography of the brain: A comparison between pigs and humans

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2017.08.029

Keywords

Magnetic resonance elastography; Human brain; Porcine brain; Storage and loss moduli; Viscoelasticity

Funding

  1. NSF [CMMI 1727268]
  2. Stanford Child Health Research Institute
  3. Thrasher Research Foundation Early Career Award
  4. NIH [EB001981]
  5. General Electric Healthcare Tiger Team funding

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Magnetic resonance elastography holds promise as a non-invasive, easy-to-use, in vivo biomarker for neurodegenerative diseases. Throughout the past decade, pigs have gained increased popularity as large animal models for human neurodegeneration. However, the volume of a pig brain is an order of magnitude smaller than the human brain, its skull is 40% thicker, and its head is about twice as big. This raises the question to which extent established vibration devices, actuation frequencies, and analysis tools for humans translate to large animal studies in pigs. Here we explored the feasibility of using human braid magnetic resonance elastography to characterize the dynamic properties of the porcine brain. In contrast to humans, where vibration devices induce an anterior-posterior displacement recorded in transverse sections, the porcine anatomy requires a dorsal-ventral displacement recorded in coronal sections. Within these settings, we applied a wide range of actuation frequencies, from 40 Hz to 90 Hz, and recorded the storage and loss moduli for human and porcine brains. Strikingly, we found that optimal actuation frequencies for humans translate one-to-one to pigs and reliably generate shear waves for elastographic post-processing. In a direct comparison, human and porcine storage and loss moduli followed similar trends and increased with increasing frequency. When translating these frequency dependent storage and loss moduli into the frequency-independent stiffnesses and viscosities of a standard linear solid model, we found human values of mu(1) = 1.3 kPa, mu(2) = 2.1 kPa, and eta = 0.025 kPa s and porcine values of mu(1) = 2.0 kPa, mu(2) = 4.9 kPa, and eta = 0.046 kPa s. These results suggest that living human brain is softer and less viscous than dead porcine brain. Our study compares, for the first time, magnetic resonance elastography in human and porcine brains, and paves the way towards systematic interspecies comparison studies and ex vivo validation of magnetic resonance elastography as a whole.

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