Cerebral vascular mean transit time (MTT), defined as the ratio of cerebral blood volume to cerebral blood flow (CBV/CBF), is a valuable indicator of the cerebral circulation. Positron emission tomography (PET) and dynamic susceptibility contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DSC-MRI) are useful for the quantitative determination of MTT in the clinical setting. The aim of this study was to establish a normal value set of MTT as determined by PET and by DSC-MRI and to identify differences between these methods. Seven healthy volunteers were studied with 15 O-PET (H 2 15 O and C 15 O) and gradient-echo echo-planar DSC-MRI at 1.5 T. In the DSC-MRI study with bolus injection of contrast agent, deconvolution analysis was performed. Comparison of gray-to-white matter ratios showed fairly good agreement between PET and DSC-MRI for all parameters (relative CBV, relative CBF, and relative MTT), confirming the validity of relative measurements with DSC-MRI. However, quantitative MTT measured by DSC-MRI was significantly shorter than that measured by PET in cerebral cortical regions (2.8 to 3.0 secs for DSC-MRI versus 3.9 to 4.3 secs for PET) and the centrum semiovale (3.5 secs for DSC-MRI versus 4.8 secs for PET). These discrepancies may be because of the differences in the intrinsic sensitivity of each imaging modality to vascular components; whereas PET measurement of CBV is equally sensitive to all vascular components, measurement with DSC-MRI originates from the microvasculature in the vicinity of the brain parenchyma. This underlying difference may influence interpretation of MTT determined by PET or by DSC-MRI for patients with cerebrovascular disease.
Increased ONS diameter measured on coronal orbital thin-slice fat-saturated T2-weighted MR images is a strong indicator of increased ICP, and helps to differentiate between passive subdural fluid collection due to brain atrophy and subdural hygroma with increased ICP.
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