TY - JOUR
T1 - Mapping heterogenous anisotropic tissue mechanical properties with transverse isotropic nonlinear inversion MR elastography
AU - McGarry, Matthew
AU - Van Houten, Elijah
AU - Sowinski, Damian
AU - Jyoti, Dhrubo
AU - Smith, Daniel R.
AU - Caban-Rivera, Diego A.
AU - McIlvain, Grace
AU - Bayly, Philip
AU - Johnson, Curtis L.
AU - Weaver, John
AU - Paulsen, Keith
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2022/5
Y1 - 2022/5
N2 - The white matter tracts of brain tissue consist of highly-aligned, myelinated fibers; white matter is structurally anisotropic and is expected to exhibit anisotropic mechanical behavior. In vivo mechanical properties of tissue can be imaged using magnetic resonance elastography (MRE). MRE can detect and monitor natural and disease processes that affect tissue structure; however, most MRE inversion algorithms assume locally homogenous properties and/or isotropic behavior, which can cause artifacts in white matter regions. A heterogeneous, model-based transverse isotropic implementation of a subzone-based nonlinear inversion (TI-NLI) is demonstrated. TI-NLI reconstructs accurate maps of the shear modulus, damping ratio, shear anisotropy, and tensile anisotropy of in vivo brain tissue using standard MRE motion measurements and fiber directions estimated from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). TI-NLI accuracy was investigated with using synthetic data in both controlled and realistic settings: excellent quantitative and spatial accuracy was observed and cross-talk between estimated parameters was minimal. Ten repeated, in vivo, MRE scans acquired from a healthy subject were co-registered to demonstrate repeatability of the technique. Good resolution of anatomical structures and bilateral symmetry were evident in MRE images of all mechanical property types. Repeatability was similar to isotropic MRE methods and well within the limits required for clinical success. TI-NLI MRE is a promising new technique for clinical research into anisotropic tissues such as the brain and muscle.
AB - The white matter tracts of brain tissue consist of highly-aligned, myelinated fibers; white matter is structurally anisotropic and is expected to exhibit anisotropic mechanical behavior. In vivo mechanical properties of tissue can be imaged using magnetic resonance elastography (MRE). MRE can detect and monitor natural and disease processes that affect tissue structure; however, most MRE inversion algorithms assume locally homogenous properties and/or isotropic behavior, which can cause artifacts in white matter regions. A heterogeneous, model-based transverse isotropic implementation of a subzone-based nonlinear inversion (TI-NLI) is demonstrated. TI-NLI reconstructs accurate maps of the shear modulus, damping ratio, shear anisotropy, and tensile anisotropy of in vivo brain tissue using standard MRE motion measurements and fiber directions estimated from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). TI-NLI accuracy was investigated with using synthetic data in both controlled and realistic settings: excellent quantitative and spatial accuracy was observed and cross-talk between estimated parameters was minimal. Ten repeated, in vivo, MRE scans acquired from a healthy subject were co-registered to demonstrate repeatability of the technique. Good resolution of anatomical structures and bilateral symmetry were evident in MRE images of all mechanical property types. Repeatability was similar to isotropic MRE methods and well within the limits required for clinical success. TI-NLI MRE is a promising new technique for clinical research into anisotropic tissues such as the brain and muscle.
KW - Anisotropic
KW - Brain mechanics
KW - Elastography
KW - Transverse isotropic
KW - White matter
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85127058976&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.media.2022.102432
DO - 10.1016/j.media.2022.102432
M3 - Article
C2 - 35358836
AN - SCOPUS:85127058976
SN - 1361-8415
VL - 78
JO - Medical Image Analysis
JF - Medical Image Analysis
M1 - 102432
ER -