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Probing the ballistic microcirculation in placenta using flow‐compensated and non‐compensated intravoxel incoherent motion imaging
Author(s) -
Jiang Ling,
Sun Taotao,
Liao Yuhao,
Sun Yi,
Qian Zhaoxia,
Zhang Yi,
Wu Dan
Publication year - 2021
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.28426
Subject(s) - intravoxel incoherent motion , nuclear magnetic resonance , flow velocity , flow (mathematics) , placenta , physics , doppler effect , diffusion , umbilical artery , magnetic resonance imaging , nuclear medicine , diffusion mri , medicine , mechanics , fetus , radiology , pregnancy , genetics , astronomy , biology , thermodynamics
Purpose Intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) imaging is widely used to evaluate microcirculatory flow, which consists of diffusive and ballistic flow components. We proposed a joint use of flow‐compensated (FC) and non‐compensated (NC) diffusion gradients to probe the fraction and velocity of ballistic flow in the placenta. Methods Forty pregnant women were included in this study and scanned on a 1.5T clinical scanner. FC and NC diffusion MRI (dMRI) sequences were achieved using a pair of identical or mirrored bipolar gradients. A joint FC‐NC model was established to estimate the fraction ( f b ) and velocity ( v b ) of the ballistic flow. Conventional IVIM parameters ( f , D , and D *) were obtained from the FC and NC data, separately. The v b and f · D *, as placental flow velocity measurements, were correlated with the umbilical‐artery Doppler ultrasound indices and gestational ages. Results The ballistic flow component can be observed from the difference between the FC and NC dMRI signal decay curves. v b fitted from the FC‐NC model showed strong correlations with umbilical‐artery impedance indices, the systolic‐to‐diastolic (SD) ratio and pulsatility index (PI), with correlation coefficients of 0.65 and 0.62. The f · D * estimated from the NC data positively correlated with SD and PI, while the FC‐based f · D * values showed weak negative correlations. Significant gestational‐age dependence was also found in the flow velocity measurements. Conclusion Our results demonstrated the feasibility of using FC and NC dMRI to noninvasively measure ballistic flow velocity in the placenta, which may be used as a new marker to evaluate placenta microcirculation.

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