• J Neuroimaging · Jan 2022

    Global cerebrospinal fluid as a zero-reference regularization for brain quantitative susceptibility mapping.

    • Alexey V Dimov, Thanh D Nguyen, Pascal Spincemaille, Elizabeth M Sweeney, Nicole Zinger, Ilhami Kovanlikaya, Brian H Kopell, Susan A Gauthier, and Yi Wang.
    • Department of Radiology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, USA.
    • J Neuroimaging. 2022 Jan 1; 32 (1): 141147141-147.

    Background And PurposeThe objective ofthis study was to demonstrate a global cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) method for a consistent and automated zero referencing of brain quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM).MethodsWhole brain CSF mask was automatically segmented by thresholding the gradient echo transverse relaxation ( R2∗) map, and regularization was employed to enforce uniform susceptibility distribution within the CSF volume in the field-to-susceptibility inversion. This global CSF regularization method was compared with a prior ventricular CSF regularization. Both reconstruction methods were compared in a repeatability study of 12 healthy subjects using t-test on susceptibility measurements, and in patient studies of 17 multiple sclerosis (MS) and 10 Parkinson's disease (PD) patients using Wilcoxon rank-sum test on radiological scores.ResultsIn scan-rescan experiments, global CSF regularization provided more consistent CSF volume as well as higher repeatability of QSM measurements than ventricular CSF regularization with a smaller bias: -2.7 parts per billion (ppb) versus -0.13 ppb (t-test p<0.05) and a narrower 95% limits of agreement: [-7.25, 6.99] ppb versus [-16.60, 11.19 ppb] (f-test p<0.05). In PD and MS patients, global CSF regularization reduced smoothly varying shadow artifacts and significantly improved the QSM quality score (p<0.001).ConclusionsThe proposed whole brain CSF method for QSM zero referencing improves repeatability and image quality of brain QSM compared to the ventricular CSF method.© 2021 American Society of Neuroimaging.

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