Diffusion Tensor Imaging - Hackensack Meridian Health...Diffusion Tensor Imaging Theory and Practice...

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  • Diffusion Tensor Imaging

    Theory and Practice

    Noam Eshkar, M.D. Chairman Director of Neuroradiology Department of Radiology JFK Medical Center Edison Radiology Group Edison, N.J.

  • Diffusion Tensor Imaging

    • Method of Magnetic Resonance Imaging

    • MRI sensitized to mobility of protons

    – Differences in rate of motion mapped

    – Each voxel represents rate of water diffusion at that location

    • Derives from Brownian Motion

  • Brownian Motion Random motion of particles in a fluid as a result of continuous collisions with molecules of the surrounding medium

    Restricted Diffusion

  • Isotropy / Anisotropy

    Isotropy: Movement uniform in all directions

    Anisotropy: Movement not uniform in all directions –directionally dependent

  • Diffusion - Normal Anatomy

    CSF

    White matter

    Grey matter

  • Diffusion - Pathology

    • Sensitive to changes in tissue microstructure

    – Axonal damage

    – Axonal loss

    – Edema

    – Demyelination

    – Inflammation

    – Necrosis

  • Diffusion - Pathology

    • Increased diffusion restriction – Acute infarct – Abscess – Epidermoid

    • Variable diffusion restriction – Hematoma – Tumor – Thrombus – Demyelination – Encephalitis – MS – CJD – Hypertensive encephalopathy – CPM

  • Increased Diffusion Restriction

    Acute Infarct Abscess Epidermoid

  • Increased Diffusion Restriction

    MS PRES CJD

  • Decreased Diffusion Restriction

    Chronic infarct Arachnoid cyst GBM

  • Diffusion Tensor Imaging

    • Adds directional information

  • Diffusion Tensor Imaging

    DTI Fractional Anisotropy (FA) color map

  • Fractional Anisotropy color map

    0.7 0.3 0.14

  • Tractography

    • Linear assembly of voxels with similar maximum diffusion direction.

    Intensity and direction

  • Tractography

  • Seed tracking

    • Selection of voxels from which to build tracts – user selected

  • Tracts – Projection fibers

    • Interconnect cortical areas to deep nuclei, brainstem, cerebellum, spinal cord

    – Primary motor/premotor/supplementary

    • Corticospinal

    • Corticobulbar

    • Corticopontine

    – Geniculocalcarine

    • (Optic radiations)

  • Corticospinal tracts

    Non fused

  • Tracts – Commissural fibers

    • Interconnect similar cortical areas between opposite hemispheres

    – Corpus callosum

    • Interhemispheric sensorimotor /auditory

    – Anterior commissure

    • Nociception/pain

  • Corpus callosum

  • Tracts – Association fibers

    • Interconnect cortical areas within a hemisphere. – Cingulum

    • Visceromotor/visuaspatial/memory

    – Superior / Inferior occipitofrontal fasciculus • Spatial awareness/auditory/visual association

    – Uncinate fasciculus • Auditory/verbal memory

    – Arcuate fasciculus (part of superior longitudinal) • Auditory/Speech

    – Occipitotemporal fasciculus (inferior longitudinal) • Visual emotion/memory

  • Arcuate fasciculus

    Broca/Wernicke

  • Uncinate fasciculus

    • Inferior frontal to anterior temporal

    • Auditory verbal and declarative memory

  • Optic radiations

  • Tumor – Surgical Planning

    • Minimizing damage to eloquent cortex and white matter tracts while maximizing tumor resection. – Motor, Sensory, Language

    • Color maps/tractography as presurgical and intraoperative guidance in regions adjacent to functional tracts – Correlate with conventional MR .

    – Intraoperative electrical stimulation as needed.

  • Tumor – Surgical Planning

    • Accuracy - tracts can be over or underrepresented

    – Preop registration accuracy 1-2 mm

    • Vs gold standard intraop stimulation

    – Decreased accuracy w/ intraop shift/swelling

    – Artifacts - susceptibility, blood, edema, air

    – Non standard language of tumor/tract interaction

    • Disrupted, displaced, deviated, deformed, destroyed, degenerated, interrupted, infiltrated, splayed…

  • Low grade tumor

  • Tractography BOLD fusion (anatomic + functional)

    finger toe

  • Tractography BOLD fusion

  • High grade tumor

  • Tumor progression - GBM

  • Mixed displacement /disruption

  • Trauma

    • Diffuse Axonal Injury

    – Shear strain injury with disruption of axonal membranes and cytoskeletal network.

    – Detection of microstructural injury.

    – Persistent injury after mild TBI.

    • Most brain injury mild

    • 30% with residual deficits/disability

    • Large public health issue

    • CT/MRI underestimate axonal injury

  • DTI – Axonal Injury

    • Acute - Reduced Fractional Anisotropy (FA) – In vivo detection – early stages TBI < 24 hours.

    • Most common: Internal capsule and corpus callosum

    • Chronic - Marker for long term neurocognitive deficits – Reduced FA - poorer performance on cognitive tasks

    • Currently limited utility for individual cases. – No universal threshold for standard for abnormality – Spurious low FA: crossing tracts, edema – Research limitations: Heterogeneity of trauma date, ratings,

    mechanisms/ ages/ control groups/ cohorts/ magnets/sequences/ lesion localization/ study design/ data analysis/ outcome measures, etc.

    – Longitudinal studies limited. Acute – subacute – chronic.

  • Axonal Injury

    FLAIR Gradient Echo

    < FA -Normal vs abnormal -Technical vs anatomic -?Significance -Group vs individual

  • Epilepsy

    • Preoperative planning - avoiding eloquent structures

    – Temporal lobectomy

    – other resective surgeries

    • Augmenting search for epileptogenic focus

    – Conventional MRI sensitivity approx 50%

    • Epilepsy protocol

    – PET/SPECT/MEG

  • Epilepsy - preoperative

    Meyer’s loop

  • Epilepsy – Diffusion - Acute

    • Periictal / immediate postictal

    – Restricted diffusion > normalization

    • Similar to ischemia

    • Normalizes in approximately 14 days

    – Mostly grey matter changes

    – May spread beyond epileptogenic focus

    – Rare to capture clinically

    • Differential diagnosis

  • Epilepsy – Diffusion - Chronic

    • Chronic – interictal – Decreased FA. – May be more sensitive than conventional MR

    • “Nonlesional” – negative MRI

    – Subtle hippocamal sclerosis / cortical dysplasia • Decreased FA in normal appearing ipsilateral white matter

    – Multilesional cases – epileptogenic lesion • Tuberous Sclerosis

    – Corpus callosum - decreased FA in new epilepsy in children.

    – Chronic refractory – synaptic reorganization/ altered connectivity

  • Multiple Sclerosis - DTI

    • Decreased FA –normal appearing white matter – Most pronounced with chronic lesions – Peri -plaque FA abnormalities – May precede an acute lesion

    • < FA lesion burden correlating w /disability – Global histogram vs regional ROI

    • Decreased fiber tracts, local vs. distant. – Wallerian degeneration

    • FA can be unreliable – fiber crossings – Edema – Anatomic variation – Technical

  • Multiple Sclerosis – DTI - FA

    0.15

    0.24

    0.30

    0.30

    0.75

  • Dementia – cognitive impairment

    • Mild Cognitive Impairment – early AD

    – < FA in normal appearing white matter

    – Decreased hippocampal FA may precede atrophy

    – < FA in cingular bundle and other association tracts.

    – FA abnormalities overlap with other dementias – nonspecific.

  • Psychiatric

    • Schizophrenia

    – Disconnectivity theory

    • Alteration in fiber bundle connectivity

    – < FA abnormalities in multiple areas – inconsistent

    • Major Depression

    – < FA in sup long/inf long/ inf front-occ fasciculi

  • Development

    • Increasing FA in increasing age – Infancy to adulthoood – Conventional MR stabilizes at age 2

    • Evaluating injuries that affect development • Hypoperfusion/hypoxia

    • Autism – Prefrontal and temporal < FA – Connectivity disorder?

    • Congenital anomalies – Corpus callosum and other tract malformations – Cortical dysplasias

    • FA abnormalities beyond MR visible lesions • Decreased tracts serving cortical anomalies

  • Corpus Callosum Agenesis

  • Ischemia/Infarct

    • DWI critical in acute stroke

    • DTI progressively < FA with infarct age

    • DTI abnormalities in Wallerian degeneration distant from infarct precedes visible MR abnormalities

    – Role of local and distant FA abnormalities in prediction of clinical outcomes?

  • Brain stem/Spinal Cord

    • Utility limited – Small size of cord – Breathing – Swallowing – CSF pulsation

    • Multiple Sclerosis – < FA in lesions and in adjacent normal appearing cord

    • Tumors – Ependymoma vs astrocytoma

    • Areas of investigation – Spondylotic myelopathy/Transverse

    myelitis/Trauma/Ischemia

  • Medulla tumor

  • Thank you!