Abstract

The measurement of venous cerebral blood oxygenation (Yv) has potential applications in the study of patient groups where oxygen extraction and/or metabolism are compromised. It is also useful for fMRI studies to assess the stimulus-induced changes in Yv, particularly since basal Yv partially accounts for inter-subject variation in the haemodynamic response to a stimulus. A range of MRI-based methods of measuring Yv have been developed recently. Here, we use a method based on the change in phase in the MR image arising from the field perturbation caused by deoxygenated haemoglobin in veins. We build on the existing phase based approach (Method I), where Yv is measured in a large vein (such as the superior sagittal sinus) based on the field shift inside the vein with assumptions as to the vein's shape and orientation. We demonstrate two novel modifications which address limitations of this method. The first modification (Method II), maps the actual form of the vein, rather than assume a given shape and orientation. The second modification (Method III) uses the intra and perivascular phase change in response to a known change in Yv on hyperoxia to measure normoxic Yv in smaller veins. Method III can be applied to veins whose shape, size and orientation are not accurately known, thus allowing more localised measures of venous oxygenation. Results demonstrate that the use of an overly fine spatial filter caused an overestimation in Yv for Method I, whilst the measurement of Yv using Method II was less sensitive to this bias, giving Yv=0.62±0.03. Method III was applied to mapping of Yv in local veins across the brain, yielding a distribution of values with a mode of Yv=0.661±0.008.

Highlights

  • Venous cerebral blood oxygenation (Yv) is the haemoglobin oxygen saturation fraction in venous blood

  • A measure of Yv is required for hyperoxia-based calibrated blood oxygen-level dependent (BOLD) experiments as a measured value of basal oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) is preferred (Chiarelli et al, 2007; Driver et al, 2012), basal Yv measurements can be combined with phase contrast MRI measures of cerebral blood flow (CBF) to calculate cerebral oxygen metabolism (Xu et al, 2009; Jain et al, 2010), and measures of Yv have been used to explain inter-subject variability in fMRI results (Lu et al, 2008)

  • Whilst the use of the finer spatial filter (D = 64) in Method I leads to an overestimation of Yv, this overestimation was much smaller for Method II

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Summary

Introduction

Venous cerebral blood oxygenation (Yv) is the haemoglobin oxygen saturation fraction in venous blood. A measure of Yv is required for hyperoxia-based calibrated blood oxygen-level dependent (BOLD) experiments as a measured (rather than assumed) value of basal oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) is preferred (Chiarelli et al, 2007; Driver et al, 2012), basal Yv measurements can be combined with phase contrast MRI measures of cerebral blood flow (CBF) to calculate cerebral oxygen metabolism (Xu et al, 2009; Jain et al, 2010), and measures of Yv have been used to explain inter-subject variability in fMRI results (Lu et al, 2008). Whilst fully oxygenated blood has a similar magnetic susceptibility to the surrounding tissue, the susceptibility of deoxygenated haemoglobin (dHb) is sufficiently different to cause a field perturbation. This field perturbation results in a phase shift, the value of which depends on the amount of dHb and the orientation of the blood vessel. The magnetic susceptibility difference can be measured from this phase shift and Yv can be estimated, assuming a value for haematocrit (Hct)

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