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Compartmental diffusion and microstructural properties of human brain gray and white matter studied with double diffusion encoding magnetic resonance spectroscopy of metabolites and water

Double diffusion encoding (DDE) of the water signal offers a unique ability to separate the effect of microscopic anisotropic diffusion in structural units of tissue from the overall macroscopic orientational distribution of cells. However, the specificity in detected microscopic anisotropy is limit...

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Autores principales: Lundell, Henrik, Najac, Chloé, Bulk, Marjolein, Kan, Hermien E., Webb, Andrew G., Ronen, Itamar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Academic Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8204266/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33757904
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.117981
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author Lundell, Henrik
Najac, Chloé
Bulk, Marjolein
Kan, Hermien E.
Webb, Andrew G.
Ronen, Itamar
author_facet Lundell, Henrik
Najac, Chloé
Bulk, Marjolein
Kan, Hermien E.
Webb, Andrew G.
Ronen, Itamar
author_sort Lundell, Henrik
collection PubMed
description Double diffusion encoding (DDE) of the water signal offers a unique ability to separate the effect of microscopic anisotropic diffusion in structural units of tissue from the overall macroscopic orientational distribution of cells. However, the specificity in detected microscopic anisotropy is limited as the signal is averaged over different cell types and across tissue compartments. Performing side-by-side water and metabolite DDE spectroscopic (DDES) experiments provides complementary measures from which intracellular and extracellular microscopic fractional anisotropies (μFA) and diffusivities can be estimated. Metabolites are largely confined to the intracellular space and therefore provide a benchmark for intracellular μFA and diffusivities of specific cell types. By contrast, water DDES measurements allow examination of the separate contributions to water μFA and diffusivity from the intra- and extracellular spaces, by using a wide range of b values to gradually eliminate the extracellular contribution. Here, we aimed to estimate tissue and compartment specific human brain microstructure by combining water and metabolites DDES experiments. We performed our DDES measurements in two brain regions that contain widely different amounts of white matter (WM) and gray matter (GM): parietal white matter (PWM) and occipital gray matter (OGM) in a total of 20 healthy volunteers at 7 Tesla. Metabolite DDES measurements were performed at b = 7199 s/mm(2), while water DDES measurements were performed with a range of b values from 918 to 7199 s/mm(2). The experimental framework we employed here resulted in a set of insights pertaining to the morphology of the intracellular and extracellular spaces in both gray and white matter. Results of the metabolite DDES experiments in both PWM and OGM suggest a highly anisotropic intracellular space within neurons and glia, with the possible exception of gray matter glia. The water μFA obtained from the DDES results at high b values in both regions converged with that of the metabolite DDES, suggesting that the signal from the extracellular space is indeed effectively suppressed at the highest b value. The μFA measured in the OGM significantly decreased at lower b values, suggesting a considerably lower anisotropy of the extracellular space in GM compared to WM. In PWM, the water μFA remained high even at the lowest b value, indicating a high degree of organization in the interstitial space in WM. Tortuosity values in the cytoplasm for water and tNAA, obtained with correlation analysis of microscopic parallel diffusivity with respect to GM/WM tissue fraction in the volume of interest, are remarkably similar for both molecules, while exhibiting a clear difference between gray and white matter, suggesting a more crowded cytoplasm and more complex cytomorphology of neuronal cell bodies and dendrites in GM than those found in long-range axons in WM.
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spelling pubmed-82042662021-07-01 Compartmental diffusion and microstructural properties of human brain gray and white matter studied with double diffusion encoding magnetic resonance spectroscopy of metabolites and water Lundell, Henrik Najac, Chloé Bulk, Marjolein Kan, Hermien E. Webb, Andrew G. Ronen, Itamar Neuroimage Article Double diffusion encoding (DDE) of the water signal offers a unique ability to separate the effect of microscopic anisotropic diffusion in structural units of tissue from the overall macroscopic orientational distribution of cells. However, the specificity in detected microscopic anisotropy is limited as the signal is averaged over different cell types and across tissue compartments. Performing side-by-side water and metabolite DDE spectroscopic (DDES) experiments provides complementary measures from which intracellular and extracellular microscopic fractional anisotropies (μFA) and diffusivities can be estimated. Metabolites are largely confined to the intracellular space and therefore provide a benchmark for intracellular μFA and diffusivities of specific cell types. By contrast, water DDES measurements allow examination of the separate contributions to water μFA and diffusivity from the intra- and extracellular spaces, by using a wide range of b values to gradually eliminate the extracellular contribution. Here, we aimed to estimate tissue and compartment specific human brain microstructure by combining water and metabolites DDES experiments. We performed our DDES measurements in two brain regions that contain widely different amounts of white matter (WM) and gray matter (GM): parietal white matter (PWM) and occipital gray matter (OGM) in a total of 20 healthy volunteers at 7 Tesla. Metabolite DDES measurements were performed at b = 7199 s/mm(2), while water DDES measurements were performed with a range of b values from 918 to 7199 s/mm(2). The experimental framework we employed here resulted in a set of insights pertaining to the morphology of the intracellular and extracellular spaces in both gray and white matter. Results of the metabolite DDES experiments in both PWM and OGM suggest a highly anisotropic intracellular space within neurons and glia, with the possible exception of gray matter glia. The water μFA obtained from the DDES results at high b values in both regions converged with that of the metabolite DDES, suggesting that the signal from the extracellular space is indeed effectively suppressed at the highest b value. The μFA measured in the OGM significantly decreased at lower b values, suggesting a considerably lower anisotropy of the extracellular space in GM compared to WM. In PWM, the water μFA remained high even at the lowest b value, indicating a high degree of organization in the interstitial space in WM. Tortuosity values in the cytoplasm for water and tNAA, obtained with correlation analysis of microscopic parallel diffusivity with respect to GM/WM tissue fraction in the volume of interest, are remarkably similar for both molecules, while exhibiting a clear difference between gray and white matter, suggesting a more crowded cytoplasm and more complex cytomorphology of neuronal cell bodies and dendrites in GM than those found in long-range axons in WM. Academic Press 2021-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8204266/ /pubmed/33757904 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.117981 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Lundell, Henrik
Najac, Chloé
Bulk, Marjolein
Kan, Hermien E.
Webb, Andrew G.
Ronen, Itamar
Compartmental diffusion and microstructural properties of human brain gray and white matter studied with double diffusion encoding magnetic resonance spectroscopy of metabolites and water
title Compartmental diffusion and microstructural properties of human brain gray and white matter studied with double diffusion encoding magnetic resonance spectroscopy of metabolites and water
title_full Compartmental diffusion and microstructural properties of human brain gray and white matter studied with double diffusion encoding magnetic resonance spectroscopy of metabolites and water
title_fullStr Compartmental diffusion and microstructural properties of human brain gray and white matter studied with double diffusion encoding magnetic resonance spectroscopy of metabolites and water
title_full_unstemmed Compartmental diffusion and microstructural properties of human brain gray and white matter studied with double diffusion encoding magnetic resonance spectroscopy of metabolites and water
title_short Compartmental diffusion and microstructural properties of human brain gray and white matter studied with double diffusion encoding magnetic resonance spectroscopy of metabolites and water
title_sort compartmental diffusion and microstructural properties of human brain gray and white matter studied with double diffusion encoding magnetic resonance spectroscopy of metabolites and water
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8204266/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33757904
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.117981
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