Lecture 17 & 18 - Neuroimaging Flashcards
How does MRI produce images?
- contrast between isotopes spins in the horizontal and vertical planes (difference in orientation depends on type of tissue, hence abnormalities will be depicted) using magnetisation and enducing radio frequencies.
what is T1 decay?
the time it takes for isotopes spinning in the transverse plane (due to excitation) to return back to the Z-plane (relaxation).
- relaxation time depends on spins environment
- more mobile/fluid tissue takes LONGER to relax to z-plane (e.g., blood, CSF)
What is T2 decay?
the time it takes for isotopes spinning in the transverse plane, to become DEPHASED (fan out, decreasing net moment)
- dephasing time depends on spin-spin interaction (constricted tissue decays faster)
what is T2* decay?
same as T2 but taking into account the heterogeneity of the brain environment (additional fields besides neural tissue)
- presence of bone, sinuses, air, leads to additional fields -> more obstruction -> more spin interaction between isotopes -> faster dephasing.
what will mobile substances appear as on the T2 contrast images?
brighter (longer time to decay)
what are the pros and cons of each MRI type?
T1 - good for gray/white matter contrast
- poor CSF contrast
T2 - poor gray/white matter contrast
- good CSF/fluid contrast
T2 * - can detect fluctuations in bloodstream caused by iron
how does fMRI work?
uses changes in oxygenation/deoxygenation of blood in local areas to facilitate neuronal activity in response to stimulus using BOLD (blood oxygen level dependency)
what are three types of PERFUSION images?
- Mean transit time (MTT; time blood/substance stays in capillary bed of target brain region)
- Cerebral blood volume (CBV; amount of blood present in target tissue)
- cerebral blood flow (CBF; amount of blood delivered to target tissue per time constant)
What does perfusion MRI allow us to detect? (x4)
- stroke
- ischaemia (low blood flow)
- tumour malignancy
- cortical atrophy (dementia)
What is diffusion?
Measure of random thermal motion in brain, based on Brownian-motion.
what is Isotropic and Anisotropic diffusion?
ID - particles diffuse in random free directions (spherical; no boundaries; e.g., water, CSF)
AD - diffusion is contained within boundaries (Ellipsoid; white matter, muscle)
Describe the contrast that would be seen on DWI and ADC images of Diffusion scans (in terms of diffusion)
- on DWI images, the more spinning particles move (due to lack of boundary), the higher the diffusion gradient (b), resulting in LOSS OF SIGNAL leading to a darker appearance.
- on ADC images, it is the INVERSE (more diffusion/free space = brighter)
what does D stand for in Diffusion?
membrane permeability (greater permeability = more diffusion)
early detection of stroke is only possible for
DWI and ADC (not T2 or CT)
What is a DIFFUSION TENSOR
- similar to ADC, but robust to head rotation.
- FA value close to 1 signals more directional/anisotropic structures (axons)