Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging Science, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging Science, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
Neuroimage. 2019 Nov 1;201:116026. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.116026. Epub 2019 Jul 19.
Multi-compartment tissue modeling using diffusion magnetic resonance imaging has proven valuable in the brain, offering novel indices sensitive to the tissue microstructural environment in vivo on clinical MRI scanners. However, application, characterization, and validation of these models in the spinal cord remain relatively under-studied. In this study, we apply a diffusion "signal" model (diffusion tensor imaging, DTI) and two commonly implemented "microstructural" models (neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging, NODDI; spherical mean technique, SMT) in the human cervical spinal cord of twenty-one healthy controls. We first provide normative values of DTI, SMT, and NODDI indices in a number of white matter ascending and descending pathways, as well as various gray matter regions. We then aim to validate the sensitivity and specificity of these diffusion-derived contrasts by relating these measures to indices of the tissue microenvironment provided by a histological template. We find that DTI indices are sensitive to a number of microstructural features, but lack specificity. The microstructural models also show sensitivity to a number of microstructure features; however, they do not capture the specific microstructural features explicitly modelled. Although often regarded as a simple extension of the brain in the central nervous system, it may be necessary to re-envision, or specifically adapt, diffusion microstructural models for application to the human spinal cord with clinically feasible acquisitions - specifically, adjusting, adapting, and re-validating the modeling as it relates to both theory (i.e. relevant biology, assumptions, and signal regimes) and parameter estimation (for example challenges of acquisition, artifacts, and processing).
使用扩散磁共振成像进行多腔室组织建模已被证明在大脑中非常有价值,它提供了在临床磁共振扫描仪上对组织微结构环境敏感的新指标。然而,这些模型在脊髓中的应用、特征描述和验证仍然相对较少研究。在这项研究中,我们在 21 名健康对照者的颈段脊髓中应用了一种扩散“信号”模型(弥散张量成像,DTI)和两种常用的“微结构”模型(神经丝取向弥散和密度成像,NODDI;球均值技术,SMT)。我们首先在许多白质上行和下行通路以及各种灰质区域提供了 DTI、SMT 和 NODDI 指数的正常参考值。然后,我们旨在通过将这些测量值与组织微环境的组织学模板提供的指数相关联,验证这些扩散衍生对比度的敏感性和特异性。我们发现 DTI 指数对许多微观结构特征敏感,但特异性较差。微观结构模型也对许多微观结构特征敏感;然而,它们没有明确捕捉到所建模的特定微观结构特征。尽管脊髓在中枢神经系统中通常被视为大脑的简单延伸,但可能需要重新构想或专门调整扩散微观结构模型,以应用于具有临床可行采集的人体脊髓-特别是调整、适应和重新验证与理论(即相关生物学、假设和信号范围)和参数估计(例如采集、伪影和处理的挑战)相关的建模。