Fast Diffusion Tensor Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Mouse Brain at Ultrahigh-Field: Aiming at Cohort Studies |
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Authors: | Hans-Peter Müller Ina Vernikouskaya Albert C. Ludolph Jan Kassubek Volker Rasche |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Neurology, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany.; 2. Experimental Cardiovascular Imaging, Core Facility Small Animal MRI, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany.; University of Maryland, College Park, United States of America, |
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Abstract: | IntroductionIn-vivo high resolution diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) of the mouse brain is often limited by the low signal to noise ratio (SNR) resulting from the required small voxel sizes. Recently, cryogenically cooled resonators (CCR) have demonstrated significant increase of the effective SNR. It is the objective of this study to enable fast DTI of the mouse brain. In this context, CCRs appear attractive for SNR improvement.MethodsThree mice underwent a DTI examination at 1562×250 µm3 spatial resolution with a CCR at ultrahigh field (11.7T). Diffusion images were acquired along 30 gradient directions plus 5 references without diffusion encoding, resulting in a total acquisition time of 35 minutes. For comparison, mice additionally underwent a standardized 110 minutes acquisition protocol published earlier. Fractional anisotropy (FA) and fiber tracking (FT) results including quantitative tractwise fractional anisotropy statistics (TFAS) were qualitatively and quantitatively compared.ResultsQualitative and quantitative assessment of the calculated fractional anisotropy maps and fibre tracking results showed coinciding outcome comparing 35 minute scans to the standardized 110 minute scan. Coefficients of variation for ROI-based FA-comparison as well as for TFAS revealed comparable results for the different scanning protocols.ConclusionMouse DTI at 11.7 T was performed with an acquisition time of approximately 30 minutes, which is considered feasible for cohort studies. The rapid acquisition protocol reveals reliable and reproducible FA-values and FT reconstructions, thus allowing an experimental setup for in-vivo large scale whole brain murine DTI cohort studies. |
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