Abstract

Several magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequences have been applied to assess injured glands but without histological validation. To evaluate longitudinal changes in multiparametric MRI (mp-MRI) of irradiated salivary glands in a rat model and investigate correlations between mp-MRI and histological findings. Prospective. Submandibular glands of 36 rats were radiated using a single dose of 15 Gy X-ray (irradiation [IR] group), and 6 other rats were enrolled into sham-IR group. mp-MRI were scanned 1 day after sham-IR (n= 6), or 1, 2, 4, 8, 12, 24 weeks after IR (n= 36, 6 per subgroup). A 3.0-T/Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), readout-segmented echo-planar imaging (EPI) sequence; intravoxel incoherent motion DWI, single-shot EPI sequence; T1 mapping, dual-flip-angle gradient-echo sequence with volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination; T2 mapping, turbo spin-echo sequence. Parameters including apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), pure diffusion coefficient (D), pseudo-diffusion coefficient (D* ), perfusion fraction (f), T1 and T2 value were obtained. Histological examinations, including hematoxylin and eosin staining (for acinar cell fraction [AC%] detection), Masson's trichrome staining (for degree of fibrosis [F%] determination) and CD34-immunohistochemical staining (for microvessel density [MVD] calculation), were performed at corresponding time points. One-way analysis of variance was used to compare the mp-MRI and histological parameters among different groups. Spearman correlation analysis was applied to determine the correlation between mp-MRI and histological parameters. Two-sided P ≤ 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Changes of mp-MRI parameters (ADC, D, D* , f, T1, T2) and histological results (AC%, F%, MVD) among the seven groups were all significant. ADC, D, and T2 values negatively correlated with AC% (ADC, r= -0.728; D, r= -0.773; T2, r= -0.600), f positively correlated with MVD (r=0.496), and T1 values positively correlated with F% (r= 0.714). DATA CONCLUSION: mp-MRI might be able to noninvasively and quantitatively evaluate the dynamic pathological changes within the irradiated salivary glands. 1 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 2.

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