학술논문

Change in Cerebral Perfusion Detected by Dynamic Susceptibility Contrast Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Normal Volunteers Examined During Normal Breathing and Hyperventilation
Document Type
Conference
Source
2009 3rd International Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering , 2009. ICBBE 2009. 3rd International Conference on. :1-4 Jun, 2009
Subject
Bioengineering
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Computing and Processing
Magnetic susceptibility
Magnetic resonance imaging
Blood flow
Biomedical imaging
Radiation detectors
Medical diagnostic imaging
Physics
Neurophysiology
Radiology
Hospitals
Language
ISSN
2151-7614
2151-7622
Abstract
Cerebral perfusion parameters were measured using dynamic susceptibility contrast magnetic resonance imaging (DSC-MRI) in eight healthy volunteers examined during normal breathing and spontaneous hyperventilation. DSC-MRI-based cerebral blood flow (CBF) decreased during hyperventilation in all volunteers (average decrease 29%), and the corresponding global CBF estimates were 73 plusmn 19 ml/(min 100 g) during normal breathing and 52 plusmn 7.9 ml/(min 100 g) during hyperventilation (mean plusmn SD, n = 8). Furthermore, the hypocapnic conditions induced by hyperventilation resulted in a prolongation of the mean transit time (MTT) by on average 13%. The observed CBF estimates appeared to be systematically overestimated, in accordance with previously published DSC-MRI results, but reduced to more reasonable levels when a previously retrieved calibration factor was applied.