Abstract

The purpose of the study is to characterize diffusion tensor imaging indices in the developing spinal cord, evaluating differences based on age and cord region. Describing the progression of DTI indices in the pediatric cord increases our understanding of spinal cord development. A retrospective analysis was performed on DTI acquired in 121 pediatric patients (mean, 8.6 years; range, 0.3-18.0 years) at Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt from 2017 to 2018. Diffusion-weighted images (15 directions; b = 750 s/mm2; slice thickness, 5 mm; in-plane resolution, 1.0 × 1.0 mm2) were acquired on a 3T scanner in the cervicothoracic and/or thoracolumbar cord. Manual whole-cord segmentation was performed. Images were masked and further segmented into cervical, upper thoracic, thoracolumbar, and conus regions. Analyses of covariance were performed for each DTI-derived index to investigate how age affects diffusion across cord regions, and 95% confidence intervals were calculated across age for each derived index and region. Post hoc testing was performed to analyze regional differences. Analyses of covariance revealed significant correlations of age with axial diffusivity, mean diffusivity, and fractional anisotropy (all, P < .001). There were also significant differences among cord regions for axial diffusivity, radial diffusivity, mean diffusivity, and fractional anisotropy (all, P < .001). This research demonstrates that diffusion evolves in the pediatric spinal cord during development, dependent on both cord region and the diffusion index of interest. Future research could investigate how diffusion may be affected by common pediatric spinal pathologies.

Highlights

  • BACKGROUND AND PURPOSEThe purpose of the study is to characterize diffusion tensor imaging indices in the developing spinal cord, evaluating differences based on age and cord region

  • This research demonstrates that diffusion evolves in the pediatric spinal cord during development, dependent on both cord region and the diffusion index of interest

  • Spinal cord DTI presents additional challenges compared with brain DTI: 1) the small size of the cord; 2) lower SNR; 3) cardiac, respiratory, and patient motion; and 4) dynamic vascular and CSF flow,[6] all of which are further exacerbated in the pediatric spinal cord

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Summary

Objectives

The purpose of the study is to characterize diffusion tensor imaging indices in the developing spinal cord, evaluating differences based on age and cord region. Our aim was to leverage improved, clinically focused DTI acquisitions in a large clinical sample to characterize the range of normal DTI indices over all pediatric ages and measure variation across age and cord regions in DTI-derived indices. The purpose of the study was to characterize DTI-derived indices across the pediatric spinal cord, evaluating differences in age and cord region, and to expand our understanding of diffusion trends in the normal pediatric cord, potentially benchmarking the clinical utility of DTI

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