Lee Sangmin, Park Soomin, Hong Sungwha, Kim Soyeon, Yoon Junghee, Choi Jihye
Department of Veterinary Medical Imaging, College of Veterinary Medicine, Seoul National University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Front Vet Sci. 2024 Mar 11;11:1298215. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2024.1298215. eCollection 2024.
Brain perfusion allows for the evaluation of cerebral hemodynamics, particularly in brain infarcts and tumors. Computed tomography (CT) perfusion (CTP) provides reliable data; however, it has a limited scan field of view and radiation exposure. Magnetic resonance (MR) perfusion provides detailed imaging of small structures and a wide scan field of view. However, no study has compared CTP and MR perfusion and assessed the correlation between the perfusion parameters measured using CTP and MR perfusion. The aim of the present study was to assess the correlation and agreement of the cerebral perfusion derived from dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC)-MRI and CTP in dogs. In this crossover design study, the cerebral blood volume (CBV), cerebral blood flow (CBF), mean transit time, and time to peak were measured in the temporal cerebral cortex, caudate nucleus, thalamus, piriform lobe, and hippocampus using CTP and DSC-MRI in six healthy beagle dogs and a dog with a pituitary tumor. On the color map of healthy beagles, blood vessels and the perivascular brain parenchyma appeared as red-green, indicating high perfusion, and the areas distant from the vessels appeared as green-blue, indicating low perfusion levels in CTP and DSC-MRI. CTP parameters were highest in the piriform lobe (CBF = 121.11 ± 12.78 mL/100 g/min and CBV = 8.70 ± 2.04 mL/100 g) and lowest in the thalamus (CBF = 63.75 ± 25.24 mL/100 g/min and CBV = 4.02 ± 0.55 mL/100 g). DSC-MRI parameters were also highest in the piriform lobe (CBF = 102.31 ± 14.73 mL/100 g/min and CBV = 3.17 ± 1.23 mL/100 g) and lowest in the thalamus (CBF = 37.73 ± 25.11 mL/100 g/min and CBV = 0.81 ± 0.44 mL/100 g) although there was no statistical correlation in the quantitative perfusion parameters between CTP and DSC-MRI. In a dog with a pituitary tumor, the color map of the tumor appeared as a red scale, indicating high perfusion and higher CBF and CBV on CTP (149 mL/100 g and 20 mL/100 g/min) and on DSC-MRI (116.3 mL/100 g and 15.32 mL/100 g/min) compared to those measured in healthy dogs. These findings indicate that DSC-MRI and CTP maps exhibit comparability and interchangeability in the assessment of canine brain perfusion.
脑灌注可用于评估脑血流动力学,尤其是在脑梗死和肿瘤方面。计算机断层扫描(CT)灌注(CTP)可提供可靠的数据;然而,其扫描视野有限且存在辐射暴露。磁共振(MR)灌注可对小结构进行详细成像且扫描视野广阔。然而,尚无研究比较CTP和MR灌注,并评估使用CTP和MR灌注测量的灌注参数之间的相关性。本研究的目的是评估动态磁敏感对比(DSC)-MRI和CTP在犬脑灌注中的相关性和一致性。在这项交叉设计研究中,对6只健康比格犬和1只患有垂体瘤的犬,使用CTP和DSC-MRI测量颞叶脑皮质、尾状核、丘脑、梨状叶和海马体的脑血容量(CBV)、脑血流量(CBF)、平均通过时间和达峰时间。在健康比格犬的彩色图上,血管和血管周围的脑实质呈红绿色,表示高灌注,远离血管的区域呈绿蓝色,表示CTP和DSC-MRI中的低灌注水平。CTP参数在梨状叶最高(CBF = 121.11 ± 12.78 mL/100 g/min,CBV = 8.70 ± 2.04 mL/100 g),在丘脑最低(CBF = 63.75 ± 25.24 mL/100 g/min,CBV = 4.02 ± 0.55 mL/100 g)。DSC-MRI参数在梨状叶也最高(CBF = 102.31 ± 14.73 mL/100 g/min,CBV = 3.17 ± 1.23 mL/100 g),在丘脑最低(CBF = 37.73 ± 25.11 mL/100 g/min,CBV = 0.81 ± 0.44 mL/100 g),尽管CTP和DSC-MRI的定量灌注参数之间无统计学相关性。在患有垂体瘤的犬中,肿瘤的彩色图呈红色调,表示高灌注,与健康犬相比,CTP(149 mL/100 g和20 mL/100 g/min)和DSC-MRI(116.3 mL/100 g和15.32 mL/100 g/min)上的CBF和CBV更高。这些发现表明,DSC-MRI和CTP图在评估犬脑灌注方面具有可比性和互换性。