Abstract

The aim of this study was to quantify a range of MR parameters [apparent proton density, longitudinal relaxation time T1, magnetisation transfer (MT) ratio, MT saturation (which represents the additional percentage MT saturation of the longitudinal magnetisation caused by a single MT pulse) and apparent transverse relaxation rate R2*] in the white matter columns and grey matter of the healthy cervical spinal cord. The cervical cords of 13 healthy volunteers were scanned at 3 T using a protocol optimised for multi-parameter mapping. Intra-subject co-registration was performed using linear registration, and tissue- and column-specific parameter values were calculated. Cervical cord parameter values measured from levels C1–C5 in 13 subjects are: apparent proton density, 4822 ± 718 a.u.; MT ratio, 40.4 ± 1.53 p.u.; MT saturation, 1.40 ± 0.12 p.u.; T1 = 1848 ± 143 ms; R2* = 22.6 ± 1.53 s–1. Inter-subject coefficients of variation were low in both the cervical cord and tissue- and column-specific measurements, illustrating the potential of this method for the investigation of changes in these parameters caused by pathology. In summary, an optimised cervical cord multi-parameter mapping protocol was developed, enabling tissue- and column-specific measurements to be made. This technique has the potential to provide insight into the pathological processes occurring in the cervical cord affected by neurological disorders. © 2013 The Authors. NMR in Biomedicine published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Highlights

  • The spinal cord (SC) is a common site of involvement in neurological disorders, such as multiple sclerosis [1,2,3], amyotrophic lateral sclerosis [4], spinal cord injury (SCI) [5] and neuromyelitis optica [6]

  • The registered MT-weighted (regMTw) images were used for region placement as the highest grey matter (GM)–white matter (WM) contrast was observed in these images

  • GM and WM appear to be better differentiated in the magnetisation transfer (MT) saturation maps than in the magnetisation transfer ratio (MTR) maps, which could potentially indicate enhanced sensitivity to macromolecular content differences in tissue, in line with a reduced sensitivity to B1 and T1 in the MT saturation maps in comparison with the MTR maps [22,23,24].Post-mortem validation with histology is required to confirm the biophysical basis of the MT saturation parameter map contrast in comparison with MTR

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Summary

Research article

Received: 16 November 2012, Revised: 25 June 2013, Accepted: 9 August 2013, Published online in Wiley Online Library: 16 September 2013.

INTRODUCTION
MR acquisition
Image analysis
Statistical analysis
SC registration pipeline
ROI analysis
Dorsal WM Left lateral WM Right lateral WM GM
Full Text
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