Fiber-orientation independent component of R2* obtained from single-orientation MRI measurements in simulations and a post-mortem human optic chiasm

Standard

Fiber-orientation independent component of R2* obtained from single-orientation MRI measurements in simulations and a post-mortem human optic chiasm. / Fritz, Francisco J; Mordhorst, Laurin; Ashtarayeh, Mohammad; Periquito, Joao; Pohlmann, Andreas; Morawski, Markus; Jaeger, Carsten; Niendorf, Thoralf; Pine, Kerrin J; Callaghan, Martina F; Weiskopf, Nikolaus; Mohammadi, Siawoosh.

In: FRONT NEUROSCI-SWITZ, Vol. 17, 2023, p. 1133086.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{edb8f8bce5294d7b964d5dbc025e6f87,
title = "Fiber-orientation independent component of R2* obtained from single-orientation MRI measurements in simulations and a post-mortem human optic chiasm",
abstract = "The effective transverse relaxation rate (R2*) is sensitive to the microstructure of the human brain like the g-ratio which characterises the relative myelination of axons. However, the fibre-orientation dependence of R2* degrades its reproducibility and any microstructural derivative measure. To estimate its orientation-independent part (R2,iso*) from single multi-echo gradient-recalled-echo (meGRE) measurements at arbitrary orientations, a second-order polynomial in time model (hereafter M2) can be used. Its linear time-dependent parameter, β1, can be biophysically related to R2,iso* when neglecting the myelin water (MW) signal in the hollow cylinder fibre model (HCFM). Here, we examined the performance of M2 using experimental and simulated data with variable g-ratio and fibre dispersion. We found that the fitted β1 can estimate R2,iso* using meGRE with long maximum-echo time (TEmax ≈ 54 ms), but not accurately captures its microscopic dependence on the g-ratio (error 84%). We proposed a new heuristic expression for β1 that reduced the error to 12% for ex vivo compartmental R2 values. Using the new expression, we could estimate an MW fraction of 0.14 for fibres with negligible dispersion in a fixed human optic chiasm for the ex vivo compartmental R2 values but not for the in vivo values. M2 and the HCFM-based simulations failed to explain the measured R2*-orientation-dependence around the magic angle for a typical in vivo meGRE protocol (with TEmax ≈ 18 ms). In conclusion, further validation and the development of movement-robust in vivo meGRE protocols with TEmax ≈ 54 ms are required before M2 can be used to estimate R2,iso* in subjects.",
author = "Fritz, {Francisco J} and Laurin Mordhorst and Mohammad Ashtarayeh and Joao Periquito and Andreas Pohlmann and Markus Morawski and Carsten Jaeger and Thoralf Niendorf and Pine, {Kerrin J} and Callaghan, {Martina F} and Nikolaus Weiskopf and Siawoosh Mohammadi",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2023 Fritz, Mordhorst, Ashtarayeh, Periquito, Pohlmann, Morawski, Jaeger, Niendorf, Pine, Callaghan, Weiskopf and Mohammadi.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.3389/fnins.2023.1133086",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "1133086",
journal = "FRONT NEUROSCI-SWITZ",
issn = "1662-453X",
publisher = "Frontiers Media S. A.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Fiber-orientation independent component of R2* obtained from single-orientation MRI measurements in simulations and a post-mortem human optic chiasm

AU - Fritz, Francisco J

AU - Mordhorst, Laurin

AU - Ashtarayeh, Mohammad

AU - Periquito, Joao

AU - Pohlmann, Andreas

AU - Morawski, Markus

AU - Jaeger, Carsten

AU - Niendorf, Thoralf

AU - Pine, Kerrin J

AU - Callaghan, Martina F

AU - Weiskopf, Nikolaus

AU - Mohammadi, Siawoosh

N1 - Copyright © 2023 Fritz, Mordhorst, Ashtarayeh, Periquito, Pohlmann, Morawski, Jaeger, Niendorf, Pine, Callaghan, Weiskopf and Mohammadi.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - The effective transverse relaxation rate (R2*) is sensitive to the microstructure of the human brain like the g-ratio which characterises the relative myelination of axons. However, the fibre-orientation dependence of R2* degrades its reproducibility and any microstructural derivative measure. To estimate its orientation-independent part (R2,iso*) from single multi-echo gradient-recalled-echo (meGRE) measurements at arbitrary orientations, a second-order polynomial in time model (hereafter M2) can be used. Its linear time-dependent parameter, β1, can be biophysically related to R2,iso* when neglecting the myelin water (MW) signal in the hollow cylinder fibre model (HCFM). Here, we examined the performance of M2 using experimental and simulated data with variable g-ratio and fibre dispersion. We found that the fitted β1 can estimate R2,iso* using meGRE with long maximum-echo time (TEmax ≈ 54 ms), but not accurately captures its microscopic dependence on the g-ratio (error 84%). We proposed a new heuristic expression for β1 that reduced the error to 12% for ex vivo compartmental R2 values. Using the new expression, we could estimate an MW fraction of 0.14 for fibres with negligible dispersion in a fixed human optic chiasm for the ex vivo compartmental R2 values but not for the in vivo values. M2 and the HCFM-based simulations failed to explain the measured R2*-orientation-dependence around the magic angle for a typical in vivo meGRE protocol (with TEmax ≈ 18 ms). In conclusion, further validation and the development of movement-robust in vivo meGRE protocols with TEmax ≈ 54 ms are required before M2 can be used to estimate R2,iso* in subjects.

AB - The effective transverse relaxation rate (R2*) is sensitive to the microstructure of the human brain like the g-ratio which characterises the relative myelination of axons. However, the fibre-orientation dependence of R2* degrades its reproducibility and any microstructural derivative measure. To estimate its orientation-independent part (R2,iso*) from single multi-echo gradient-recalled-echo (meGRE) measurements at arbitrary orientations, a second-order polynomial in time model (hereafter M2) can be used. Its linear time-dependent parameter, β1, can be biophysically related to R2,iso* when neglecting the myelin water (MW) signal in the hollow cylinder fibre model (HCFM). Here, we examined the performance of M2 using experimental and simulated data with variable g-ratio and fibre dispersion. We found that the fitted β1 can estimate R2,iso* using meGRE with long maximum-echo time (TEmax ≈ 54 ms), but not accurately captures its microscopic dependence on the g-ratio (error 84%). We proposed a new heuristic expression for β1 that reduced the error to 12% for ex vivo compartmental R2 values. Using the new expression, we could estimate an MW fraction of 0.14 for fibres with negligible dispersion in a fixed human optic chiasm for the ex vivo compartmental R2 values but not for the in vivo values. M2 and the HCFM-based simulations failed to explain the measured R2*-orientation-dependence around the magic angle for a typical in vivo meGRE protocol (with TEmax ≈ 18 ms). In conclusion, further validation and the development of movement-robust in vivo meGRE protocols with TEmax ≈ 54 ms are required before M2 can be used to estimate R2,iso* in subjects.

U2 - 10.3389/fnins.2023.1133086

DO - 10.3389/fnins.2023.1133086

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 37694109

VL - 17

SP - 1133086

JO - FRONT NEUROSCI-SWITZ

JF - FRONT NEUROSCI-SWITZ

SN - 1662-453X

ER -