The costs and benefits of estimating T1 of tissue alongside cerebral blood flow and arterial transit time in pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

P. Bladt (Universiteit Antwerpen)

AJ Den Dekker (Universiteit Antwerpen, TU Delft - Team Raf Van de Plas)

Patricia Clement (Universiteit Gent)

Eric Achten (Universiteit Gent)

Jan Sijbers (Universiteit Antwerpen)

Research Group
Team Raf Van de Plas
Copyright
© 2019 Piet Bladt, A.J. den Dekker, Patricia Clement, Eric Achten, Jan Sijbers
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1002/nbm.4182
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Copyright
© 2019 Piet Bladt, A.J. den Dekker, Patricia Clement, Eric Achten, Jan Sijbers
Research Group
Team Raf Van de Plas
Issue number
12
Volume number
33 (2020)
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Abstract

Multi-post-labeling-delay pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling (multi-PLD PCASL) allows for absolute quantification of the cerebral blood flow (CBF) as well as the arterial transit time (ATT). Estimating these perfusion parameters from multi-PLD PCASL data is a non-linear inverse problem, which is commonly tackled by fitting the single-compartment model (SCM) for PCASL, with CBF and ATT as free parameters. The longitudinal relaxation time of tissue T1t is an important parameter in this model, as it governs the decay of the perfusion signal entirely upon entry in the imaging voxel. Conventionally, T1t is fixed to a population average. This approach can cause CBF quantification errors, as T1t can vary significantly inter- and intra-subject. This study compares the impact on CBF quantification, in terms of accuracy and precision, of either fixing T1t, the conventional approach, or estimating it alongside CBF and ATT. It is shown that the conventional approach can cause a significant bias in CBF. Indeed, simulation experiments reveal that if T1t is fixed to a value that is 10% off its true value, this may already result in a bias of 15% in CBF. On the other hand, as is shown by both simulation and real data experiments, estimating T1t along with CBF and ATT results in a loss of CBF precision of the same order, even if the experiment design is optimized for the latter estimation problem. Simulation experiments suggest that an optimal balance between accuracy and precision of CBF estimation from multi-PLD PCASL data can be expected when using the two-parameter estimator with a fixed T1t value between population averages of T1t and the longitudinal relaxation time of blood T1b.