Volume 26, Issue 3 pp. 324-330
Original Research

Visual Assessment of Brain Perfusion MRI Scans in Dementia: A Pilot Study

David Fällmar

Corresponding Author

David Fällmar

Department of Surgical Sciences/Radiology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

Correspondence: Address correspondence to David Fällmar, BFC, Department of Surgical Sciences/Radiology, Akademiska sjukhuset, 751 85 Uppsala, Sweden. E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Johan Lilja

Johan Lilja

Department of Surgical Sciences/Nuclear Medicine and PET, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

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Vilma Velickaite

Vilma Velickaite

Department of Surgical Sciences/Radiology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

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Torsten Danfors

Torsten Danfors

Department of Surgical Sciences/Nuclear Medicine and PET, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

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Mark Lubberink

Mark Lubberink

Department of Surgical Sciences/Nuclear Medicine and PET, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

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André Ahlgren

André Ahlgren

Department of Medical Radiation Physics, Lund University, Lund, Sweden

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Matthias J.P. van Osch

Matthias J.P. van Osch

C.J. Gorter Center for High Field MRI, Department of Radiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands

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Lena Kilander

Lena Kilander

Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences/Geriatrics, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

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Elna-Marie Larsson

Elna-Marie Larsson

Department of Surgical Sciences/Radiology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

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First published: 16 September 2015
Citations: 8

Conflict of Interest: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE

Functional imaging is becoming increasingly important for the detection of neurodegenerative disorders. Perfusion MRI with arterial spin labeling (ASL) has been reported to provide promising diagnostic possibilities but is not yet widely used in routine clinical work. The aim of this study was to compare, in a clinical setting, the visual assessment of subtracted ASL CBF maps with and without additional smoothing, to FDG-PET data.

METHODS

Ten patients with a clinical diagnosis of dementia and 11 age-matched cognitively healthy controls were examined with pseudo-continuous ASL (pCASL) and 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET). Three diagnostic physicians visually assessed the pCASL maps after subtraction only, and after postprocessing using Gaussian smoothing and GLM-based beta estimate functions. The assessment scores were compared to FDG PET values. Furthermore, the ability to discriminate patients from healthy elderly controls was assessed.

RESULTS

Smoothing improved the correlation between visually assessed regional ASL perfusion scores and the FDG PET SUV-r values from the corresponding regions. However, subtracted pCASL maps discriminated patients from healthy controls better than smoothed maps. Smoothing increased the number of false-positive patient identifications. Application of beta estimate functions had only a marginal effect.

CONCLUSION

Spatial smoothing of ASL images increased false positive results in the discrimination of hypoperfusion conditions from healthy elderly. It also decreased interreader agreement. However, regional characterization and subjective perception of image quality was improved.

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