Background: A cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-mask algorithm has been developed to reduce the adverse influence of CSF-low-counts on the diagnostic utility of the specific binding ratio (SBR) index calculated with Southampton method. We assessed the effect of the CSF-mask algorithm on the diagnostic performance of the SBR index for parkinsonian syndromes (PS), including Parkinson's disease, and the influence of cerebral ventricle dilatation on the CSF-mask algorithm.
Methods: We enrolled 163 and 158 patients with and without PS, respectively. Both the conventional SBR (non-CSF-mask) and SBR corrected with the CSF-mask algorithm (CSF-mask) were calculated from I-Ioflupane single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) images of these patients. We compared the diagnostic performance of the corresponding indices and evaluated whether the effect of the CSF-mask algorithm varied according to the extent of ventricle dilatation, as assessed with the Evans index (EI). A receiver-operating characteristics (ROC) analysis was used for statistical analyses.
Results: ROC analyses demonstrated that the CSF-mask algorithm performed better than the non-CSF-mask (no correction, area under the curve [AUC] = 0.917 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.887-0.947] vs. 0.895 [95% CI 0.861-0.929], p < 0.001; attenuation correction, AUC = 0.930 [95% CI 0.902-0.957] vs. 0.903 [95% CI 0.870-0.936], p < 0.001). When not corrected for attenuation, no significant difference in the AUC was observed in the low EI group between the non-CSF-mask and CSF-mask algorithms (0.927 [95% CI 0.877-0.978] vs. 0.942 [95% CI 0.898-0.986], p = 0.11); in the middle and high EI groups, the CSF-mask algorithm performed better than the non-CSF-mask algorithm (middle EI group, AUC = 0.894 [95% CI 0.825-0.963] vs. 0.872 [95% CI 0.798-0.947], p < 0.05; high EI group, AUC = 0.931 [95% CI 0.883-0.978] vs. 0.900 [95% CI 0.840-0.961], p < 0.01). When corrected for attenuation, significant differences in the AUC were observed in all three EI groups (low EI group, AUC = 0.961 [95% CI 0.924-0.998] vs. 0.942 [95% CI 0.895-0.988], p < 0.05; middle EI group, AUC = 0.905 [95% CI 0.843-0.968] vs. 0.872 [95% CI 0.800-0.944], p < 0.005; high EI group, AUC = 0.954 [95% CI 0.917-0.991] vs. 0.917 [95% CI 0.862-0.973], p < 0.005).
Conclusion: The CSF-mask algorithm improved the performance of the SBR index in informing the diagnosis of PS, especially in cases with ventricle dilatation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13550-019-0558-x | DOI Listing |
J Neuroimaging
January 2022
Department of Radiology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, USA.
Background And Purpose: The 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).
Methods: Whole brain CSF mask was automatically segmented by thresholding the gradient echo transverse relaxation ( 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.
EJNMMI Res
September 2019
Department of Radiology, Keio University School of Medicine, 35 Shinanomachi, Shinjyuku-ku, Tokyo, 160-8582, Japan.
Background: A cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-mask algorithm has been developed to reduce the adverse influence of CSF-low-counts on the diagnostic utility of the specific binding ratio (SBR) index calculated with Southampton method. We assessed the effect of the CSF-mask algorithm on the diagnostic performance of the SBR index for parkinsonian syndromes (PS), including Parkinson's disease, and the influence of cerebral ventricle dilatation on the CSF-mask algorithm.
Methods: We enrolled 163 and 158 patients with and without PS, respectively.
Radiol Phys Technol
June 2018
Graduate School of Nursing, Hyogo University of Health Sciences, 1-3-6, Minatojima, Chuo-ku, Kobe, Hyogo, 650-8530, Japan.
This study aimed to evaluate the effect of ventricular enlargement on the specific binding ratio (SBR) and to validate the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-Mask algorithm for quantitative SBR assessment of I-FP-CIT single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) images with the use of a 3D-striatum digital brain (SDB) phantom. Ventricular enlargement was simulated by three-dimensional extensions in a 3D-SDB phantom comprising segments representing the striatum, ventricle, brain parenchyma, and skull bone. The Evans Index (EI) was measured in 3D-SDB phantom images of an enlarged ventricle.
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