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Magnetic resonance measurement of blood and CSF flow rates with phase contrast--normal values, repeatability and CO2 reactivity.
- Source :
-
Acta neurochirurgica. Supplement [Acta Neurochir Suppl] 2008; Vol. 102, pp. 263-70. - Publication Year :
- 2008
-
Abstract
- Background: Similarity in flow pulsatility has been proposed as a basis for semi-automated segmentation of vessel lumens for MR-based flow measurement, but re-examinations of salient aspects of the methodology have not been widely reported.<br />Methods: 12 normal control subjects underwent repeated (3*Baseline+1*5%CO2) phase contrast measurements of CSF flow through the cerebral aqueduct and foramen magnum, and CBF through the 6 large cranial vessels at the level of the 1st vertebra. Average flows were calculated for regions temporally correlated (0.3 < or = Rthreshold < or = 0.95) to user defined seed points and their 3 x 3 neighbours.<br />Results: Arterial CBF averaged 710ml/min, with low variability (+/- 4%/17%, intra-individual/group CV respectively) and was the only flow to respond significantly to 5%/mmHg CO2. Venous outflow was much smaller (298ml/min +/- 10%/ 72%), possibly due to the weak venous pulse and variable venous anatomy. Average CSF flows exceeded the classical 0.4ml/min CSF production rate and were highly variable--aqueduct: 0.6ml/min (+/- 50%/93%), foramen magnum: -2.7ml/min (+/- 158%/226%).<br />Conclusions: This preliminary analysis identified procedural steps that can improve the accuracy and repeatability of MR flow measurements, but the process remains user-dependent for the weakly pulsatile foramen magnum CSF and venous flows where variability remains a significant confound even to relatively large perturbations such as CO2 administration.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Blood Vessels physiology
Female
Foramen Magnum physiology
Humans
Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods
Male
Reference Values
Reproducibility of Results
Blood Flow Velocity physiology
Carbon Dioxide metabolism
Cerebral Aqueduct physiology
Cerebrovascular Circulation physiology
Image Enhancement
Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0065-1419
- Volume :
- 102
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Acta neurochirurgica. Supplement
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 19388327
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-211-85578-2_50