Biexponential diffusion tensor analysis of human brain diffusion data. |
| |
Authors: | Stephan E Maier Sridhar Vajapeyam Hatsuho Mamata Carl-Fredrik Westin Ferenc A Jolesz Robert V Mulkern |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Radiology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA. stephan@bwh.harvard.edu |
| |
Abstract: | Several studies have shown that in tissues over an extended range of b-factors, the signal decay deviates significantly from the basic monoexponential model. The true nature of this departure has to date not been identified. For the current study, line scan diffusion images of brain suitable for biexponential diffusion tensor analysis were acquired in normal subjects on a clinical MR system. For each of six noncollinear directions, 32 images with b-factors ranging from 5 to 5000 s/mm2 were collected. Biexponential fits yielded parameter maps for a fast and a slow diffusion component. A subset of the diffusion data, consisting of the images obtained at the conventional range of b-factors between 5 and 972 s/mm2, was used for monoexponential diffusion tensor analysis. Fractional anisotropy (FA) of the fast-diffusion component and the monoexponential fit exhibited no significant difference. FA of the slow-diffusion biexponential component was significantly higher, particularly in areas of lower fiber density. The principal diffusion directions for the two biexponential components and the monoexponential solution were largely the same and in agreement with known fiber tracts. The second and third diffusion eigenvector directions also appeared to be aligned, but they exhibited significant deviations in localized areas. |
| |
Keywords: | diffusion tensor imaging line scan high‐b diffusion imaging white matter biexponential signal decay |
|
|