Huang Xunan, Chafi Hatim, Matthews Kenneth L, Carmichael Owen, Li Tanping, Miao Qiguang, Wang Shuzhen, Jia Guang
School of Computer Science and Technology, Xidian University, Xi'an, Shaanxi, 710071, China.
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, USA.
Magn Reson Imaging. 2019 Jun;59:68-76. doi: 10.1016/j.mri.2019.03.009. Epub 2019 Mar 8.
Magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) can be used to noninvasively resolve the displacement pattern of induced mechanical waves propagating in tissue. The goal of this study is to establish an ergonomically flexible passive-driver design for brain MRE, to evaluate the reproducibility of MRE tissue-stiffness measurements, and to investigate the relationship between tissue-stiffness measurements and driver frequencies. An ergonomically flexible passive pillow-like driver was designed to induce mechanical waves in the brain. Two-dimensional finite-element simulation was used to evaluate mechanical wave propagation patterns in brain tissues. MRE scans were performed on 10 healthy volunteers at mechanical frequencies of 60, 50, and 40 Hz. An axial mid-brain slice was acquired using an echo-planar imaging sequence to map the displacement pattern with the motion-encoding gradient along the through-plane (z) direction. All subjects were scanned and rescanned within 1 h. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to test for differences between white matter and gray matter shear-stiffness values. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to test for differences between shear-stiffness measurements made at different frequencies. Scan-rescan reproducibility was evaluated by calculating the within-subject coefficient of variation (CV) for each subject. The finite-element simulation showed that a pillow-like passive driver is capable of efficient shear-wave propagation through brain tissue. No subjects complained about discomfort during MRE acquisitions using the ergonomically designed driver. The white-matter elastic modulus (mean ± standard deviation) across all subjects was 3.85 ± 0.12 kPa, 3.78 ± 0.15 kPa, and 3.36 ± 0.11 kPa at frequencies of 60, 50, and 40 Hz, respectively. The gray-matter elastic modulus across all subjects was 3.33 ± 0.14 kPa, 2.82 ± 0.16 kPa, and 2.24 ± 0.14 kPa at frequencies of 60, 50, and 40 Hz, respectively. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test confirmed that the shear stiffness was significantly higher in white matter than gray matter at all three frequencies. The ranges of within-subject coefficients of variation for white matter, gray matter, and whole-brain shear-stiffness measurements for the three frequencies were 1.8-3.5% (60 Hz), 4.7-6.0% (50 Hz), and 3.7-4.1% (40 Hz). An ergonomic pneumatic pillow-like driver is feasible for highly reproducible in vivo evaluation of brain-tissue shear stiffness. Brain-tissue shear-stiffness values were frequency-dependent, thus emphasizing the importance of standardizing MRE acquisition protocols in multi-center studies.
磁共振弹性成像(MRE)可用于无创解析在组织中传播的诱导机械波的位移模式。本研究的目的是为脑部MRE建立一种符合人体工程学的灵活无源驱动器设计,评估MRE组织硬度测量的可重复性,并研究组织硬度测量与驱动器频率之间的关系。设计了一种符合人体工程学的灵活无源枕状驱动器,以在大脑中诱导机械波。使用二维有限元模拟来评估脑组织中的机械波传播模式。对10名健康志愿者进行了MRE扫描,机械频率分别为60、50和40Hz。使用回波平面成像序列采集轴向中脑切片,以沿平面(z)方向用运动编码梯度绘制位移模式。所有受试者在1小时内进行了扫描和重新扫描。使用Wilcoxon符号秩检验来测试白质和灰质剪切刚度值之间的差异。使用单因素方差分析(ANOVA)来测试在不同频率下进行的剪切刚度测量之间的差异。通过计算每个受试者的受试者内变异系数(CV)来评估扫描 - 重新扫描的可重复性。有限元模拟表明,枕状无源驱动器能够在脑组织中有效地传播剪切波。在使用符合人体工程学设计的驱动器进行MRE采集期间,没有受试者抱怨不适。在60、50和40Hz频率下,所有受试者的白质弹性模量(平均值±标准差)分别为3.85±0.12kPa、3.78±0.15kPa和3.36±0.11kPa。在60、50和40Hz频率下,所有受试者的灰质弹性模量分别为3.33±0.14kPa、2.82±0.16kPa和2.24±0.14kPa。Wilcoxon符号秩检验证实,在所有三个频率下,白质的剪切刚度均显著高于灰质。三个频率下白质、灰质和全脑剪切刚度测量的受试者内变异系数范围分别为1.8 - 3.5%(60Hz)、4.7 - 6.0%(50Hz)和3.7 - 4.1%(40Hz)。符合人体工程学的气动枕状驱动器对于脑组织剪切刚度的高度可重复体内评估是可行的。脑组织剪切刚度值与频率相关,因此强调了在多中心研究中标准化MRE采集协议的重要性。