This subproject is one of many research subprojects utilizing the resources provided by a Center grant funded by NIH/NCRR. The subproject and investigator (PI) may have received primary funding from another NIH source, and thus could be represented in other CRISP entries. The institution listed is for the Center, which is not necessarily the institution for the investigator. The goal of this research is to refine and improve the methodology of flow and perfusion imaging (DTI) for the investigators and collaborators on the P41 RR09784 ?Center for Advanced MR Technology at Stanford? effort (Core3). The rationale for using perfusion MRI (PWI) is that the perfusion thresholds for functional deficits in ischemia are slightly above that for reductions in the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC). Thus, if there is no DWI lesion, ischemia may still be the underlying cause of the patient?s symptoms, which can be revealed by PWI. In these patients (perfusion deficit, but no DWI abnormality), blood flow appears to be impaired, but not severely enough to cause energy failure in the affected region, suggesting that most or all of the affected tissue is still potentially salvageable. We hypothesize that measured perfusion (CBF, MTT, and CBV) values would reveal the irreversible tissue from the reversible events at presentation, subsequent measures will test this. We have used our refinements of the CBF mapping PWI methods developed here to study the clinical and radiological correlates of patients with a severe reduction of CBF using PWI with the CBF corrected by the Ostergaard CBF approach. We propose to further study this interesting ADC-CBV tissue pattern. These data suggest that severe CBF reductions of greater than 50% result in more severe cerebral ischemia, as measured by a higher NIHSS, a lower traceADC, a larger DWI lesion and a larger perfusion deficit. We now are attempting to ?titrate? the observed ADC decreases with measured CBF values acquired from the MRI and from XeCT studies on consecutive patients.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Research Resources (NCRR)
Type
Biotechnology Resource Grants (P41)
Project #
5P41RR009784-12
Application #
7358746
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-SBIB-F (40))
Project Start
2006-06-01
Project End
2007-05-31
Budget Start
2006-06-01
Budget End
2007-05-31
Support Year
12
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$24,942
Indirect Cost
Name
Stanford University
Department
Radiation-Diagnostic/Oncology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
009214214
City
Stanford
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94305
Maclaren, Julian; Aksoy, Murat; Ooi, Melvyn B et al. (2018) Prospective motion correction using coil-mounted cameras: Cross-calibration considerations. Magn Reson Med 79:1911-1921
Guo, Jia; Holdsworth, Samantha J; Fan, Audrey P et al. (2018) Comparing accuracy and reproducibility of sequential and Hadamard-encoded multidelay pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling for measuring cerebral blood flow and arterial transit time in healthy subjects: A simulation and in vivo study. J Magn Reson Imaging 47:1119-1132
Tamir, Jonathan I; Uecker, Martin; Chen, Weitian et al. (2017) T2 shuffling: Sharp, multicontrast, volumetric fast spin-echo imaging. Magn Reson Med 77:180-195
Lai, Lillian M; Cheng, Joseph Y; Alley, Marcus T et al. (2017) Feasibility of ferumoxytol-enhanced neonatal and young infant cardiac MRI without general anesthesia. J Magn Reson Imaging 45:1407-1418
Taviani, Valentina; Alley, Marcus T; Banerjee, Suchandrima et al. (2017) High-resolution diffusion-weighted imaging of the breast with multiband 2D radiofrequency pulses and a generalized parallel imaging reconstruction. Magn Reson Med 77:209-220
Uecker, Martin; Lustig, Michael (2017) Estimating absolute-phase maps using ESPIRiT and virtual conjugate coils. Magn Reson Med 77:1201-1207
Kogan, Feliks; Hargreaves, Brian A; Gold, Garry E (2017) Volumetric multislice gagCEST imaging of articular cartilage: Optimization and comparison with T1rho. Magn Reson Med 77:1134-1141
Aksoy, Murat; Maclaren, Julian; Bammer, Roland (2017) Prospective motion correction for 3D pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling using an external optical tracking system. Magn Reson Imaging 39:44-52
Bian, W; Tranvinh, E; Tourdias, T et al. (2016) In Vivo 7T MR Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Reveals Opposite Susceptibility Contrast between Cortical and White Matter Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 37:1808-1815
Vos, Sjoerd B; Aksoy, Murat; Han, Zhaoying et al. (2016) Trade-off between angular and spatial resolutions in in vivo fiber tractography. Neuroimage 129:117-132

Showing the most recent 10 out of 446 publications