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Temporal Diffusion Ratio (TDR) for imaging restricted diffusion: Optimisation and pre-clinical demonstration

Temporal Diffusion Ratio (TDR) is a recently proposed dMRI technique (Dell’Acqua et al., proc. ISMRM 2019) which provides contrast between areas with restricted diffusion and areas either without restricted diffusion or with length scales too small for characterisation. Hence, it has a potential for...

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Autores principales: Warner, William, Palombo, Marco, Cruz, Renata, Callaghan, Ross, Shemesh, Noam, Jones, Derek K., Dell’Acqua, Flavio, Ianus, Andrada, Drobnjak, Ivana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7615244/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36750150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2023.119930
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author Warner, William
Palombo, Marco
Cruz, Renata
Callaghan, Ross
Shemesh, Noam
Jones, Derek K.
Dell’Acqua, Flavio
Ianus, Andrada
Drobnjak, Ivana
author_facet Warner, William
Palombo, Marco
Cruz, Renata
Callaghan, Ross
Shemesh, Noam
Jones, Derek K.
Dell’Acqua, Flavio
Ianus, Andrada
Drobnjak, Ivana
author_sort Warner, William
collection PubMed
description Temporal Diffusion Ratio (TDR) is a recently proposed dMRI technique (Dell’Acqua et al., proc. ISMRM 2019) which provides contrast between areas with restricted diffusion and areas either without restricted diffusion or with length scales too small for characterisation. Hence, it has a potential for informing on pore sizes, in particular the presence of large axon diameters or other cellular structures. TDR employs the signal from two dMRI acquisitions obtained with the same, large, b-value but with different diffusion gradient waveforms. TDR is advantageous as it employs standard acquisition sequences, does not make any assumptions on the underlying tissue structure and does not require any model fitting, avoiding issues related to model degeneracy. This work for the first time introduces and optimises the TDR method in simulation for a range of different tissues and scanner constraints and validates it in a pre-clinical demonstration. We consider both substrates containing cylinders and spherical structures, representing cell soma in tissue. Our results show that contrasting an acquisition with short gradient duration, short diffusion time and high gradient strength with an acquisition with long gradient duration, long diffusion time and low gradient strength, maximises the TDR contrast for a wide range of pore configurations. Additionally, in the presence of Rician noise, computing TDR from a subset (50% or fewer) of the acquired diffusion gradients rather than the entire shell as proposed originally further improves the contrast. In the last part of the work the results are demonstrated experimentally on rat spinal cord. In line with simulations, the experimental data shows that optimised TDR improves the contrast compared to non-optimised TDR. Furthermore, we find a strong correlation between TDR and histology measurements of axon diameter. In conclusion, we find that TDR has great potential and is a very promising alternative (or potentially complement) to model-based approaches for informing on pore sizes and restricted diffusion in general.
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spelling pubmed-76152442023-10-26 Temporal Diffusion Ratio (TDR) for imaging restricted diffusion: Optimisation and pre-clinical demonstration Warner, William Palombo, Marco Cruz, Renata Callaghan, Ross Shemesh, Noam Jones, Derek K. Dell’Acqua, Flavio Ianus, Andrada Drobnjak, Ivana Neuroimage Article Temporal Diffusion Ratio (TDR) is a recently proposed dMRI technique (Dell’Acqua et al., proc. ISMRM 2019) which provides contrast between areas with restricted diffusion and areas either without restricted diffusion or with length scales too small for characterisation. Hence, it has a potential for informing on pore sizes, in particular the presence of large axon diameters or other cellular structures. TDR employs the signal from two dMRI acquisitions obtained with the same, large, b-value but with different diffusion gradient waveforms. TDR is advantageous as it employs standard acquisition sequences, does not make any assumptions on the underlying tissue structure and does not require any model fitting, avoiding issues related to model degeneracy. This work for the first time introduces and optimises the TDR method in simulation for a range of different tissues and scanner constraints and validates it in a pre-clinical demonstration. We consider both substrates containing cylinders and spherical structures, representing cell soma in tissue. Our results show that contrasting an acquisition with short gradient duration, short diffusion time and high gradient strength with an acquisition with long gradient duration, long diffusion time and low gradient strength, maximises the TDR contrast for a wide range of pore configurations. Additionally, in the presence of Rician noise, computing TDR from a subset (50% or fewer) of the acquired diffusion gradients rather than the entire shell as proposed originally further improves the contrast. In the last part of the work the results are demonstrated experimentally on rat spinal cord. In line with simulations, the experimental data shows that optimised TDR improves the contrast compared to non-optimised TDR. Furthermore, we find a strong correlation between TDR and histology measurements of axon diameter. In conclusion, we find that TDR has great potential and is a very promising alternative (or potentially complement) to model-based approaches for informing on pore sizes and restricted diffusion in general. 2023-04-01 2023-02-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7615244/ /pubmed/36750150 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2023.119930 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) International license.
spellingShingle Article
Warner, William
Palombo, Marco
Cruz, Renata
Callaghan, Ross
Shemesh, Noam
Jones, Derek K.
Dell’Acqua, Flavio
Ianus, Andrada
Drobnjak, Ivana
Temporal Diffusion Ratio (TDR) for imaging restricted diffusion: Optimisation and pre-clinical demonstration
title Temporal Diffusion Ratio (TDR) for imaging restricted diffusion: Optimisation and pre-clinical demonstration
title_full Temporal Diffusion Ratio (TDR) for imaging restricted diffusion: Optimisation and pre-clinical demonstration
title_fullStr Temporal Diffusion Ratio (TDR) for imaging restricted diffusion: Optimisation and pre-clinical demonstration
title_full_unstemmed Temporal Diffusion Ratio (TDR) for imaging restricted diffusion: Optimisation and pre-clinical demonstration
title_short Temporal Diffusion Ratio (TDR) for imaging restricted diffusion: Optimisation and pre-clinical demonstration
title_sort temporal diffusion ratio (tdr) for imaging restricted diffusion: optimisation and pre-clinical demonstration
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7615244/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36750150
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2023.119930
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