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COVID-19患者7特斯拉磁共振成像下血管周围间隙的半自动分割与定量分析

Semi-automated Segmentation and Quantification of Perivascular Spaces at 7 Tesla in COVID-19.

作者信息

Langan Mackenzie T, Smith Derek A, Verma Gaurav, Khegai Oleksandr, Saju Sera, Rashid Shams, Ranti Daniel, Markowitz Matthew, Belani Puneet, Jette Nathalie, Mathew Brian, Goldstein Jonathan, Kirsch Claudia F E, Morris Laurel S, Becker Jacqueline H, Delman Bradley N, Balchandani Priti

机构信息

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, United States.

Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Institute at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY, United States.

出版信息

Front Neurol. 2022 Apr 1;13:846957. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2022.846957. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

While COVID-19 is primarily considered a respiratory disease, it has been shown to affect the central nervous system. Mounting evidence shows that COVID-19 is associated with neurological complications as well as effects thought to be related to neuroinflammatory processes. Due to the novelty of COVID-19, there is a need to better understand the possible long-term effects it may have on patients, particularly linkage to neuroinflammatory processes. Perivascular spaces (PVS) are small fluid-filled spaces in the brain that appear on MRI scans near blood vessels and are believed to play a role in modulation of the immune response, leukocyte trafficking, and glymphatic drainage. Some studies have suggested that increased number or presence of PVS could be considered a marker of increased blood-brain barrier permeability or dysfunction and may be involved in or precede cascades leading to neuroinflammatory processes. Due to their size, PVS are better detected on MRI at ultrahigh magnetic field strengths such as 7 Tesla, with improved sensitivity and resolution to quantify both concentration and size. As such, the objective of this prospective study was to leverage a semi-automated detection tool to identify and quantify differences in perivascular spaces between a group of 10 COVID-19 patients and a similar subset of controls to determine whether PVS might be biomarkers of COVID-19-mediated neuroinflammation. Results demonstrate a detectable difference in neuroinflammatory measures in the patient group compared to controls. PVS count and white matter volume were significantly different in the patient group compared to controls, yet there was no significant association between PVS count and symptom measures. Our findings suggest that the PVS count may be a viable marker for neuroinflammation in COVID-19, and other diseases which may be linked to neuroinflammatory processes.

摘要

虽然新冠肺炎主要被认为是一种呼吸道疾病,但已证明它会影响中枢神经系统。越来越多的证据表明,新冠肺炎与神经并发症以及被认为与神经炎症过程相关的影响有关。由于新冠肺炎的新颖性,有必要更好地了解它可能对患者产生的潜在长期影响,特别是与神经炎症过程的联系。血管周围间隙(PVS)是大脑中充满液体的小间隙,在MRI扫描中出现在血管附近,据信在免疫反应调节、白细胞运输和类淋巴引流中发挥作用。一些研究表明,PVS数量增加或出现可被视为血脑屏障通透性增加或功能障碍的标志,可能参与或先于导致神经炎症过程的级联反应。由于其尺寸较小,在7特斯拉等超高磁场强度的MRI上能更好地检测到PVS,其灵敏度和分辨率提高,可对浓度和尺寸进行量化。因此,这项前瞻性研究的目的是利用一种半自动检测工具,识别和量化10名新冠肺炎患者组与类似对照组之间血管周围间隙的差异,以确定PVS是否可能是新冠肺炎介导的神经炎症的生物标志物。结果表明,与对照组相比,患者组在神经炎症指标上存在可检测到的差异。与对照组相比,患者组的PVS计数和白质体积有显著差异,但PVS计数与症状指标之间没有显著关联。我们的研究结果表明,PVS计数可能是新冠肺炎以及其他可能与神经炎症过程相关疾病中神经炎症的一个可行标志物。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/105f/9010775/a2ebdf4eec33/fneur-13-846957-g0001.jpg

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