Tanrıtanır Ayse Ceren, Villringer Kersten, Galinovic Ivana, Grittner Ulrike, Kirilina Evgeniya, Fiebach Jochen B, Villringer Arno, Khalil Ahmed A
Center for Stroke Research, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Institute of Biometry and Clinical Epidemiology, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Front Neurol. 2020 May 5;11:381. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00381. eCollection 2020.
To evaluate the impact of resting-state functional MRI scan length on the diagnostic accuracy, image quality and lesion volume estimation of BOLD delay maps used for brain perfusion assessment in acute ischemic stroke. Sixty-three acute ischemic stroke patients received a 340 s resting-state functional MRI within 24 h of stroke symptom onset. BOLD delay maps were calculated from the full scan and four shortened versions (68 s, 136 s, 204 s, 272 s). The BOLD delay lesions on these maps were compared in terms of spatial overlap and volumetric agreement with the lesions derived from the full scans and with time-to-maximum (Tmax) lesions derived from DSC-MRI in a subset of patients (n = 10). In addition, the interpretability and quality of these maps were compared across different scan lengths using mixed models. Shortened BOLD delay scans showed a small volumetric bias (ranging from 0.05 to 5.3 mL; between a 0.13% volumetric underestimation and a 7.7% overestimation relative to the mean of the volumes, depending on scan length) compared to the full scan. Decreased scan length was associated with decreased spatial overlap with both the BOLD delay lesions derived from the full scans and with Tmax lesions. Only the two shortest scan lengths (68 and 136 s) were associated with substantially decreased interpretability, decreased structure clarity, and increased noisiness of BOLD delay maps. BOLD delay maps derived from resting-state fMRI scans lasting 272 and 204 s provide sufficient diagnostic quality and adequate assessment of perfusion lesion volumes. Such shortened scans may be helpful in situations where quick clinical decisions need to be made.
评估静息态功能磁共振成像(MRI)扫描时长对用于急性缺血性脑卒中脑灌注评估的血氧水平依赖(BOLD)延迟图的诊断准确性、图像质量和病损体积估计的影响。63例急性缺血性脑卒中患者在卒中症状发作后24小时内接受了340秒的静息态功能MRI检查。从完整扫描以及四个缩短版本(68秒、136秒、204秒、272秒)计算出BOLD延迟图。在部分患者(n = 10)中,比较这些图上的BOLD延迟病损在空间重叠和体积一致性方面与完整扫描得出的病损以及与从动态磁敏感对比增强MRI(DSC-MRI)得出的达峰时间(Tmax)病损的情况。此外,使用混合模型比较不同扫描时长下这些图的可解释性和质量。与完整扫描相比,缩短的BOLD延迟扫描显示出较小的体积偏差(范围为0.05至5.3毫升;相对于体积均值,体积低估0.13%至高估7.7%,具体取决于扫描时长)。扫描时长的减少与与完整扫描得出的BOLD延迟病损以及Tmax病损的空间重叠减少相关。只有两个最短的扫描时长(68秒和136秒)与BOLD延迟图的可解释性大幅降低、结构清晰度下降和噪声增加相关。源自持续272秒和204秒的静息态功能MRI扫描的BOLD延迟图提供了足够的诊断质量和对灌注病损体积的充分评估。这种缩短的扫描在需要快速做出临床决策的情况下可能会有所帮助。