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Using MRI to study the alterations in liver blood flow, perfusion, and oxygenation in response to physiological stress challenges: Meal, hyperoxia, and hypercapnia

Authors :
Guruprasad P. Aithal
Susan T. Francis
Eleanor F. Cox
Naaventhan Palaniyappan
I. Neil Guha
Source :
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging. 49:1577-1586
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Wiley, 2018.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Noninvasive assessment of dynamic changes in liver blood flow, perfusion, and oxygenation using MRI may allow detection of subtle hemodynamic alterations in cirrhosis. PURPOSE To assess the feasibility of measuring dynamic liver blood flow, perfusion, and T2 * alterations in response to meal, hypercapnia, and hyperoxia challenges. STUDY TYPE Prospective. SUBJECTS Ten healthy volunteers (HV) and 10 patients with compensated cirrhosis (CC). FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE 3T; phase contrast, arterial spin labeling, and T2* mapping. ASSESSMENT Dynamic changes in portal vein and hepatic artery blood flow (using phase contrast MRI), liver perfusion (using arterial spin labeling), and blood oxygenation ( T2* mapping) following a meal challenge (660 kcal), hyperoxia (target PET O2 of 500 mmHg), and hypercapnia (target increase PET CO2 of ∼6 mmHg). STATISTICAL TESTS Tests between baseline and each challenge were performed using a paired two-tailed t-test (parametric) or Wilcoxon-signed-ranks test (nonparametric). Repeatability and reproducibility were determined by the coefficient of variation (CoV). RESULTS Portal vein velocity increased following the meal (70 ± 9%, P < 0.001) and hypercapnic (7 (5-11)%, P = 0.029) challenge, while hepatic artery flow decreased (-30 ± 18%, P = 0.005) following the meal challenge in HV. In CC patients, portal vein velocity increased (37 ± 13%, P = 0.012) without the decrease in hepatic artery flow following the meal. In both groups, the meal increased liver perfusion (HV: 82 ± 50%, P < 0.0001; CC: 27 (16-42)%, P = 0.011) with faster arrival time of blood (HV: -54 (-56-30)%, P = 0.074; CC: -42 ± 32%, P = 0.005). In HVs, T2* increased after the meal and in response to hyperoxia, with a decrease in hypercapnia (6 ± 8% P = 0.052; 3 ± 5%, P = 0.075; -5 ± 6%, P = 0.073, respectively), but no change in CC patients. Baseline between-session CoV

Details

ISSN :
15222586 and 10531807
Volume :
49
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4c8dfc9081617ed6cfdfc5a8e33985de