Diffusion Tensor Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Pancreas
Author(s) -
Noam Nissan,
Talia Golan,
Edna FurmanHaran,
Sara Apter,
Yael Inbar,
Arié Ariche,
Barak Bar-Zakay,
Yuri Goldes,
Michael Schvimer,
Dov Grobgeld,
Hadassa Degani
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0115783
Subject(s) - diffusion mri , effective diffusion coefficient , fractional anisotropy , intravoxel incoherent motion , nuclear medicine , magnetic resonance imaging , voxel , nuclear magnetic resonance , medicine , pancreas , perfusion , diffusion , radiology , physics , thermodynamics
Purpose To develop a diffusion-tensor-imaging (DTI) protocol that is sensitive to the complex diffusion and perfusion properties of the healthy and malignant pancreas tissues. Materials and Methods Twenty-eight healthy volunteers and nine patients with pancreatic-ductal-adenocacinoma (PDAC), were scanned at 3T with T2-weighted and DTI sequences. Healthy volunteers were also scanned with multi-b diffusion-weighted-imaging (DWI), whereas a standard clinical protocol complemented the PDAC patients’ scans. Image processing at pixel resolution yielded parametric maps of three directional diffusion coefficients λ1, λ2, λ3, apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), and fractional anisotropy (FA), as well as a λ1-vector map, and a main diffusion-direction map. Results DTI measurements of healthy pancreatic tissue at b-values 0,500 s/mm 2 yielded: λ1 = (2.65±0.35)×10 −3 , λ2 = (1.87±0.22)×10 −3 , λ3 = (1.20±0.18)×10 −3 , ADC = (1.91±0.22)×10 −3 (all in mm 2 /s units) and FA = 0.38±0.06. Using b-values of 100,500 s/mm 2 led to a significant reduction in λ1, λ2, λ3 and ADC (p<.0001) and a significant increase (p<0.0001) in FA. The reduction in the diffusion coefficients suggested a contribution of a fast intra-voxel-incoherent-motion (IVIM) component at b≤100 s/mm 2 , which was confirmed by the multi-b DWI results. In PDACs, λ1, λ2, λ3 and ADC in both 0,500 s/mm 2 and 100,500 s/mm 2 b-values sets, as well as the reduction in these diffusion coefficients between the two sets, were significantly lower in comparison to the distal normal pancreatic tissue, suggesting higher cellularity and diminution of the fast-IVIM component in the cancer tissue. Conclusion DTI using two reference b-values 0 and 100 s/mm 2 enabled characterization of the water diffusion and anisotropy of the healthy pancreas, taking into account a contribution of IVIM. The reduction in the diffusion coefficients of PDAC, as compared to normal pancreatic tissue, and the smaller change in these coefficients in PDAC when the reference b-value was modified from 0 to 100 s/mm 2 , helped identifying the presence of malignancy.
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