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. 2002 May;47(5):958-66.
doi: 10.1002/mrm.10148.

Cerebral oxygen extraction fraction and cerebral venous blood volume measurements using MRI: effects of magnetic field variation

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Cerebral oxygen extraction fraction and cerebral venous blood volume measurements using MRI: effects of magnetic field variation

Hongyu An et al. Magn Reson Med. 2002 May.

Abstract

The presence of magnetic background field inhomogeneity (DeltaB) may confound quantitative measures of cerebral venous blood volume (vCBV) and cerebral oxygen extraction fraction (MR_OEF) with T2*-based methods. The goal of this study was to correct its effect and obtain more accurate estimates of vCBV and MR_OEF. A 3D high-resolution gradient echo sequence was employed to obtain DeltaB maps by two algorithms. The DeltaB maps were then used to recover the signal loss in images acquired by a 2D multiecho gradient echo / spin echo sequence. Finally, both quantitative estimates of MR_OEF and vCBV were obtained from the DeltaB- corrected 2D multiecho gradient echo / spin echo images. A total of 12 normal subjects were studied. An overestimated vCBV was observed in the brain (4.29 +/- 0.78%) prior to DeltaB correction, while the measured vCBV was substantially reduced after DeltaB correction. Whole brain vCBV of 2.97 +/- 0.44% and 2.68 +/- 0.47% were obtained by the two different DeltaB correction methods, in excellent agreement with the reported results in the literature. Furthermore, when MR_OEF was compared with and without DeltaB correction, no significant differences (P = 0.467) were observed. The ability to simultaneously obtain vCBV and MR_OEF noninvasively may have profound clinical implications for the studies of cerebrovascular disease.

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