Inoue Kentaro, Ito Hiroshi, Goto Ryoi, Nakagawa Manabu, Kinomura Shigeo, Sato Tachio, Sato Kazunori, Fukuda Hiroshi
Department of Nuclear Medicine and Radiology, Institute of Development, Aging and Cancer, Tohoku University, 4-1 Seiryo-machi, Aoba-ku, Sendai 980-8575, Japan.
Ann Nucl Med. 2005 Jun;19(4):283-90. doi: 10.1007/BF02984620.
Several studies using single photon emission tomography (SPECT) have shown changes in cerebral blood flow (CBF) with age, which were associated with partial volume effects by some authors. Some studies have also demonstrated gender-related differences in CBF. The present study aimed to examine age and gender effects on CBF SPECT images obtained using the 99mTc-ethyl cysteinate dimer and a SPECT scanner, before and after partial volume correction (PVC) using magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Forty-four healthy subjects (29 males and 15 females; age range, 27-64 y; mean age, 50.0 +/- 9.8 y) participated. Each MR image was segmented to yield grey and white matter images and coregistered to a corresponding SPECT image, followed by convolution to approximate the SPECT spatial resolution. PVC-SPECT images were produced using the convoluted grey matter MR (GM-MR) and white matter MR images. The age and gender effects were assessed using SPM99. Decreases with age were detected in the anterolateral prefrontal cortex and in areas along the lateral sulcus and the lateral ventricle, bilaterally, in the GM-MR images and the SPECT images. In the PVC-SPECT images, decreases in CBF in the lateral prefrontal cortex lost their statistical significance. Decreases in CBF with age found along the lateral sulcus and the lateral ventricle, on the other hand, remained statistically significant, but observation of the spatially normalized MR images suggests that these findings are associated with the dilatation of the lateral sulcus and lateral ventricle, which was not completely compensated for by the spatial normalization procedure. Our present study demonstrated that age effects on CBF in healthy subjects could reflect morphological differences with age in grey matter.
几项使用单光子发射断层扫描(SPECT)的研究表明,脑血流量(CBF)会随年龄发生变化,一些作者认为这与部分容积效应有关。一些研究还证明了CBF存在性别差异。本研究旨在使用99mTc-半胱氨酸乙酯二聚体和SPECT扫描仪,在使用磁共振(MR)成像进行部分容积校正(PVC)前后,研究年龄和性别对CBF SPECT图像的影响。44名健康受试者(29名男性和15名女性;年龄范围27 - 64岁;平均年龄50.0±9.8岁)参与了研究。对每幅MR图像进行分割以生成灰质和白质图像,并将其与相应的SPECT图像进行配准,随后进行卷积以近似SPECT空间分辨率。使用卷积后的灰质MR(GM-MR)图像和白质MR图像生成PVC-SPECT图像。使用SPM99评估年龄和性别效应。在GM-MR图像和SPECT图像中,双侧前额叶前外侧皮质以及沿外侧沟和侧脑室区域的CBF随年龄降低。在PVC-SPECT图像中,前额叶外侧皮质CBF的降低失去了统计学意义。另一方面,沿外侧沟和侧脑室随年龄出现的CBF降低仍具有统计学意义,但对空间归一化后的MR图像观察表明,这些发现与外侧沟和侧脑室的扩张有关,而空间归一化程序并未完全补偿这种扩张。我们目前的研究表明,健康受试者中年龄对CBF的影响可能反映了灰质随年龄的形态学差异。