Article 2020

Imaging Pulmonary Blood Flow Using Pseudocontinuous Arterial Spin Labeling (PCASL) With Balanced Steady-State Free-Precession (bSSFP) Readout at 1.5T

{Background: Quantitative assessment of pulmonary blood flow and visualization of its temporal and spatial distribution without contrast media is of clinical significance. Purpose: To assess the potential of electrocardiogram (ECG)-triggered pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling (PCASL) imaging with balanced steady-state free-precession (bSSFP) readout to measure lung perfusion under free-breathing (FB) conditions and to study temporal and spatial characteristics of pulmonary blood flow. Study type: Prospective, observational. Subjects: Fourteen volunteers; three patients with pulmonary embolism. Field strength/sequences: 1.5T, PCASL-bSSFP. Assessment: The pulmonary trunk was labeled during systole. The following examinations were performed: 1) FB and timed breath-hold (TBH) examinations with a postlabeling delay (PLD) of 1000 msec, and 2) TBH examinations with multiple PLDs (100-1500 msec). Scan-rescan measurements were performed in four volunteers and one patient. Images were registered and the perfusion was evaluated in large vessels, small vessels, and parenchyma. Mean structural similarity indices (MSSIM) was computed and time-to-peak (TTP) of parenchymal perfusion in multiple PLDs was evaluated. Image quality reading was performed with three independent blinded readers. Statistical tests: Wilcoxon test to compare MSSIM, perfusion, and Likert scores. Spearman\textquotesingles correlation to correlate TTP and cardiac cycle duration. The repeatability coefficient (RC) and within-subject coefficient of variation (wCV) for scan-rescan measurements. Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for interreader agreement. Results: Image registration resulted in a significant (P \textless 0.05) increase of MSSIM. FB perfusion values were 6\textpercent higher than TBH (3.28 $\pm$ 1.09 vs. 3.10 $\pm$ 0.99 mL/min/mL). TTP was highly correlated with individuals\textquotesingle cardiac cycle duration (Spearman \textequals 0.89, P \textless 0.001). RC and wCV were better for TBH than FB (0.13-0.19 vs. 0.47-1.54 mL/min/mL; 6-7 vs. 19-60\textpercent). Image quality was rated very good, with ICCs 0.71-0.89. Data conclusion: ECG-triggered PCASL-bSSFP imaging of the lung at 1.5T can provide very good image quality and quantitative perfusion maps even under FB. The course of labeled blood through the lung shows a strong dependence on the individuals\textquotesingle cardiac cycle duration.}

Author(s): Seith, F and Pohmann, R and Schwartz, M and Küstner, T and Othman, AE and Kolb, M and Scheffler, K and Nikolaou, K and Schick, F and Martirosian, P
Journal: {Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging}
Volume: 52
Number (issue): 6
Pages: 1767--1782
Year: 2020
Publisher: Society for Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
DOI: 10.1002/jmri.27276
Address: Chicago, IL
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive

BibTex

@article{item_3241637,
  title = {{Imaging Pulmonary Blood Flow Using Pseudocontinuous Arterial Spin Labeling (PCASL) With Balanced Steady-State Free-Precession (bSSFP) Readout at 1.5T}},
  journal = {{Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging}},
  abstract = {{Background: Quantitative assessment of pulmonary blood flow and visualization of its temporal and spatial distribution without contrast media is of clinical significance. Purpose: To assess the potential of electrocardiogram (ECG)-triggered pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling (PCASL) imaging with balanced steady-state free-precession (bSSFP) readout to measure lung perfusion under free-breathing (FB) conditions and to study temporal and spatial characteristics of pulmonary blood flow. Study type: Prospective, observational. Subjects: Fourteen volunteers; three patients with pulmonary embolism. Field strength/sequences: 1.5T, PCASL-bSSFP. Assessment: The pulmonary trunk was labeled during systole. The following examinations were performed: 1) FB and timed breath-hold (TBH) examinations with a postlabeling delay (PLD) of 1000 msec, and 2) TBH examinations with multiple PLDs (100-1500 msec). Scan-rescan measurements were performed in four volunteers and one patient. Images were registered and the perfusion was evaluated in large vessels, small vessels, and parenchyma. Mean structural similarity indices (MSSIM) was computed and time-to-peak (TTP) of parenchymal perfusion in multiple PLDs was evaluated. Image quality reading was performed with three independent blinded readers. Statistical tests: Wilcoxon test to compare MSSIM, perfusion, and Likert scores. Spearman\textquotesingles correlation to correlate TTP and cardiac cycle duration. The repeatability coefficient (RC) and within-subject coefficient of variation (wCV) for scan-rescan measurements. Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for interreader agreement. Results: Image registration resulted in a significant (P \textless 0.05) increase of MSSIM. FB perfusion values were 6\textpercent higher than TBH (3.28 $\pm$ 1.09 vs. 3.10 $\pm$ 0.99 mL/min/mL). TTP was highly correlated with individuals\textquotesingle cardiac cycle duration (Spearman \textequals 0.89, P \textless 0.001). RC and wCV were better for TBH than FB (0.13-0.19 vs. 0.47-1.54 mL/min/mL; 6-7 vs. 19-60\textpercent). Image quality was rated very good, with ICCs 0.71-0.89. Data conclusion: ECG-triggered PCASL-bSSFP imaging of the lung at 1.5T can provide very good image quality and quantitative perfusion maps even under FB. The course of labeled blood through the lung shows a strong dependence on the individuals\textquotesingle cardiac cycle duration.}},
  volume = {52},
  number = {6},
  pages = {1767--1782},
  publisher = {Society for Magnetic Resonance Imaging},
  address = {Chicago, IL},
  year = {2020},
  slug = {item_3241637},
  author = {Seith, F and Pohmann, R and Schwartz, M and K\"ustner, T and Othman, AE and Kolb, M and Scheffler, K and Nikolaou, K and Schick, F and Martirosian, P}
}