Renal transplant patients often require imaging to ensure appropriate graft placement, to assess integrity of transplant vessel anastomosis and to evaluate for stenosis that can be a cause of graft failure. Because there is risk for nephrogenic systemic fibrosis in the setting of renal insufficiency, the use of non-contrast MRA in these patients is helpful. In this study, the ability of two non-contrast MRA methods - 3D radial linear combination balanced SSFP (VIPR-SSFP) and inflow-weighted Cartesian SSFP (IFIR) - to visualize the transplant renal vessels is compared. Twenty-one renal transplant patients were scanned using the VIPR-SSFP and IFIR sequences. Diagnostic efficacy of the sequences was scored using a four point Likert scale according to the following criteria: overall image quality, fat suppression, and arterial/venous visualization quality. Average scores for each criterion were compared using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. In addition to significantly improved venous visualization, the VIPR-SSFP sequence provided significantly improved fat suppression quality (p<0.03) compared to IFIR. VIPR-SSFP also identified several pathologies such as renal arterial pseudoaneurysm that were not visible on the IFIR images. However, IFIR afforded superior quality of arterial visualization (p<0.005). These two methods of non-contrast MR imaging each have significant strengths and are complementary to each other in evaluating the vasculature of renal allografts.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mri.2013.10.004 | DOI Listing |
Alzheimers Dement
December 2024
Laboratory of Alzheimer's Neuroimaging and Epidemiology - LANE, IRCCS Istituto Centro San Giovanni di Dio Fatebenefratelli, Brescia, Italy.
Background: This study investigated microstructural features of the locus coeruleus to entorhinal cortex pathway (LC-EC) in relation to amyloid (A), tau (T), neurodegeneration (N) markers and cognitive impairment in memory clinic patients.
Method: 124 participants were recruited from the Geneva Memory Clinic (n=30 cognitively unimpaired - CU; n=80 MCI and n=14 dementia - CI) and underwent clinical assessment, 3T MRI scan including diffusion weighted imaging, amyloid PET, and tau PET. Diffusivity indices (fractional anisotropy - FA, mean, axial and radial diffusivities - MD, AxD, RD) were assessed in the LC-EC pathway using a probabilistic atlas.
Background: Myelin integrity is central to healthy brains and is increasingly shown to be compromised in neurodegenerative diseases. Diffusion- and susceptibility-based MRI metrics can detect myelin changes. We show advanced diffusion and susceptibility metrics can detect degenerative myelin changes in ex vivo AD and HD mouse models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
December 2024
Department of Neurology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
Background: There is growing recognition that white matter microstructural integrity is affected in Alzheimer's disease. The goal of this study was to characterize sex, racial/ethnic, and apolipoprotein (APOE)-ε4 allele differences in white matter integrity.
Methods: This study included participants from ADNI, BLSA, ROS/MAP/MARS, and VMAP, all longitudinal cohorts of aging.
Background: Microstructure impairments of the limbic tracts are seen in early stages of the Alzheimer's disease (AD) continuum. Sleep disruptions differ between sexes and have been linked with AD. We examined sex differences between measures of limbic white matter tracts and objective sleep parameters in cognitively unimpaired older adults.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
December 2024
Vanderbilt Memory & Alzheimer's Center, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
Background: Socioeconomic neighborhood disadvantage has been linked to accelerated biological aging, cognitive decline, and core Alzheimer's disease neuropathology independent of individual-level factors. Our recent work indicates neighborhood disadvantage is also implicated in cerebrovascular changes known to exacerbate the development of AD, including neurovascular and hemodynamic dysfunction. Here, we investigated how neighborhood disadvantage relates to microstructural changes in white matter, a sensitive biomarker for emerging cerebrovascular disease and related neurodegeneration.
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