Quantification of cartilage biomechanical and biochemical properties via T1rho magnetic resonance imaging. |
| |
Authors: | Andrew J Wheaton George R Dodge Dawn M Elliott Steven B Nicoll Ravinder Reddy |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. andrew.wheaton@philips.com |
| |
Abstract: | The aim of this study is to develop T1rho as an MR marker of the compositional and functional condition of cartilage. Specifically, we investigate the correlation of changes in cartilage biomechanical and biochemical properties with T1rho relaxation rate in a cytokine-induced model of degeneration. Bovine cartilage explants were cultured with 30 ng/mL of interleukin-1beta to mimic the cartilage degradation of early osteoarthritis. The average rate of T1rho relaxation was calculated from T(1rho) maps acquired on a 4.7 T research scanner. Stress-relaxation biomechanical tests were conducted with a confined compression apparatus to measure uniaxial aggregate modulus (HA) and hydraulic permeability (k0) using linear biphasic theory. Proteoglycan, collagen, and water content were measured via biochemical assays. Average T(1rho) relaxation rate was strongly correlated with proteoglycan content (R2 = 0.926), HA (R2 = 0.828), and log10 k0 (R2 = 0.862). Results of this study demonstrate that T1rho MRI can detect changes in proteoglycan content and biomechanical properties of cartilage in a physiologically relevant model of cartilage degeneration. The T1rho technique can potentially be used to noninvasively and quantitatively assess the biochemical and biomechanical characteristics of articular cartilage in humans during the progression of osteoarthritis. |
| |
Keywords: | cartilage MRI osteoarthritis T1ρ proteoglycan biomechanics |
|
|