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In vivo validation of T2‐ and susceptibility‐based S v O 2 measurements with jugular vein catheterization under hypoxia and hypercapnia
Author(s) -
Miao Xin,
Nayak Krishna S.,
Wood John C.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
magnetic resonance in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.696
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1522-2594
pISSN - 0740-3194
DOI - 10.1002/mrm.27871
Subject(s) - hypercapnia , room air distribution , oxygenation , medicine , hypoxia (environmental) , jugular vein , anesthesia , oxygen , chemistry , cardiology , nuclear medicine , acidosis , physics , organic chemistry , thermodynamics
Purpose To investigate the mutual agreement of T2‐based and susceptibility‐based methods as well as their agreement with jugular catheterization, for quantifying venous oxygen saturation (S v O 2 ) at a broad range of brain oxygenation levels. Methods S v O 2 measurements using T2‐relaxation‐under‐spin‐tagging (TRUST) and susceptibility‐based oximetry (SBO) were performed in 13 healthy subjects under room air, hypoxia, and hypercapnia conditions. Agreement between TRUST and SBO was quantitatively evaluated. In two of the subjects, TRUST and SBO were compared against the clinical gold standard, co‐oximeter measurement via internal jugular vein catheterization. Results Absolute S v O 2 measurements using TRUST and SBO were highly correlated across a range of saturations from 45% to 84% (Pearson r = 0.91, P < .0001). S v O 2 ‐TRUST was significantly lower than S v O 2 ‐SBO under hypoxia and room air conditions, but the two were comparable under hypercapnia. TRUST demonstrated a larger S v O 2 increase under hypercapnia than SBO and had good agreement with jugular catheterization under hypercapnia but significantly underestimated S v O 2 under room air and hypoxia. The agreement between S v O 2 ‐SBO and the reference did not depend on the physiological state. Conclusion A systematic bias was observed between T2‐based and susceptibility‐based methods that depended on the oxygenation state. In vivo validation with jugular catheterization indicated potential underestimation of TRUST under room air and hypoxia conditions. Our findings suggested that caution should be employed in comparison of absolute S v O 2 measurements using either TRUST or SBO.