Affiliation:
1. School of Computer Science McGill University Montreal Quebec Canada
2. Joint Department of Medical Imaging and the Functional Neuroimaging Laboratory University Health Network Toronto Ontario Canada
3. Department of Physiology University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada
4. Institute of Medical Sciences University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada
Abstract
BackgroundCerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) is a measure of the change in cerebral blood flow (CBF) in response to a vasoactive challenge. It is a useful indicator of the brain's vascular health.PurposeTo evaluate the factors that influence successful and unsuccessful CVR examinations using precise arterial and end‐tidal partial pressure of CO2 control during blood oxygen level–dependent (BOLD) MRI.Study TypeRetrospective.SubjectsPatients that underwent a CVR between October 2005 and May 2021 were studied (total of 1162 CVR examinations). The mean (±SD) age was 46.1 (±18.8) years, and 352 patients (43%) were female.Field Strength/Sequence3 T; T1‐weighted images, T2*‐weighed two‐dimensional gradient‐echo sequence with standard echo‐planar readout.AssessmentMeasurements were obtained following precise hypercapnic stimuli using BOLD MRI as a surrogate of CBF. Successful CVR examinations were defined as those where: 1) patients were able to complete CVR testing, and 2) a clinically useful CVR map was generated. Unsuccessful examinations were defined as those where patients were not able to complete the CVR examination or the CVR maps were judged to be unreliable due to, for example, excessive head motion, and poor PETCO2 targeting.Statistical AnalysisSuccessful and unsuccessful CVR examinations between hypercapnic stimuli, and between different patterns of stimulus were compared with Chi‐Square tests. Interobserver variability was determined by using the intraclass correlation coefficient (P < 0.05 is significant).ResultsIn total 1115 CVR tests in 662 patients were included in the final analysis. The success rate of generating CVR maps was 90.8% (1012 of 1115). Among the different hypercapnic stimuli, those containing a step plus a ramp protocol was the most successful (95.18%). Among the unsuccessful examinations (9.23%), most were patient related (89.3%), the most common of which was difficulty breathing.Data ConclusionCO2‐BOLD MRI CVR studies are well tolerated with a high success rate.Evidence Level4Technical EfficacyStage 3
Subject
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
Cited by
2 articles.
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