학술논문

Investigating cerebral perfusion with high resolution hyperpolarized [1‐13C]pyruvate MRI
Document Type
article
Source
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. 90(6)
Subject
Engineering
Biomedical Engineering
Biomedical Imaging
Neurosciences
Clinical Research
Humans
Pyruvic Acid
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Brain
Perfusion
Spin Labels
Cerebrovascular Circulation
carbon-13
hyperpolarization
MRI
perfusion
pyruvate
Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Biomedical engineering
Language
Abstract
PurposeTo investigate high-resolution hyperpolarized (HP) 13 C pyruvate MRI for measuring cerebral perfusion in the human brain.MethodsHP [1-13 C]pyruvate MRI was acquired in five healthy volunteers with a multi-resolution EPI sequence with 7.5 × 7.5 mm2 resolution for pyruvate. Perfusion parameters were calculated from pyruvate MRI using block-circulant singular value decomposition and compared to relative cerebral blood flow calculated from arterial spin labeling (ASL). To examine regional perfusion patterns, correlations between pyruvate and ASL perfusion were performed for whole brain, gray matter, and white matter voxels.ResultsHigh resolution 7.5 × 7.5 mm2 pyruvate images were used to obtain relative cerebral blood flow (rCBF) values that were significantly positively correlated with ASL rCBF values (r = 0.48, 0.20, 0.28 for whole brain, gray matter, and white matter voxels respectively). Whole brain voxels exhibited the highest correlation between pyruvate and ASL perfusion, and there were distinct regional patterns of relatively high ASL and low pyruvate normalized rCBF found across subjects.ConclusionAcquiring HP 13 C pyruvate metabolic images at higher resolution allows for finer spatial delineation of brain structures and can be used to obtain cerebral perfusion parameters. Pyruvate perfusion parameters were positively correlated to proton ASL perfusion values, indicating a relationship between the two perfusion measures. This HP 13 C study demonstrated that hyperpolarized pyruvate MRI can assess cerebral metabolism and perfusion within the same study.