Unraveling diurnal and technical variability in cerebral hemodynamics from neurovascular 4D-Flow MRI.
Leonardo A Rivera-RiveraGrant S RobertsAnthony PeretRebecca E LanghoughErin M JonaitisLianlian DuAaron FieldLaura EisenmengerSterling C JohnsonKevin M JohnsonPublished in: Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism (2024)
Neurovascular 4D-Flow MRI enables non-invasive evaluation of cerebral hemodynamics including measures of cerebral blood flow (CBF), vessel pulsatility index (PI), and cerebral pulse wave velocity (PWV). 4D-Flow measures have been linked to various neurovascular disorders including small vessel disease and Alzheimer's disease; however, physiological and technical sources of variability are not well established. Here, we characterized sources of diurnal physiological and technical variability in cerebral hemodynamics using 4D-Flow in a retrospective study of cognitively unimpaired older adults (N = 750) and a prospective study of younger adults (N = 10). Younger participants underwent repeated MRI sessions at 7am, 4 pm, and 10 pm. In the older cohort, having an MRI earlier on the day was significantly associated with higher CBF and lower PI. In prospective experiments, time of day significantly explained variability in CBF and PI; however, not in PWV. Test-retest experiments showed high CBF intra-session repeatability (repeatability coefficient (RPC) =7.2%), compared to lower diurnal repeatability (RPC = 40%). PI and PWV displayed similar intra-session and diurnal variability (PI intra-session RPC = 22%, RPC = 24% 7am vs 4 pm; PWV intra-session RPC = 17%, RPC = 21% 7am vs 4 pm). Overall, CBF measures showed low technical variability, supporting diurnal variability is from physiology. PI and PWV showed higher technical variability but less diurnal variability.
Keyphrases
- particulate matter
- magnetic resonance imaging
- air pollution
- cerebral blood flow
- contrast enhanced
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- high intensity
- computed tomography
- heavy metals
- transcranial direct current stimulation
- drinking water
- cognitive decline
- magnetic resonance
- brain injury
- cerebral ischemia
- risk assessment
- mild cognitive impairment
- community dwelling