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Reliability of quantitative multiparameter maps is high for magnetization transfer and proton density but attenuated for R and R * in healthy young adults. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - We examined the reliability of four magnetic resonance imaging-based measurements (MT, PD, R, R*) in healthy young adults over two days, using a method to analyze measurement error sources.
  • - The study found high reproducibility across all measurements, but reliability varied by brain region, with MT and PD being consistently reliable, while R and R* showed lower reliability in some areas.
  • - The findings suggest that R and R* may not provide useful person-specific information in certain brain regions, potentially limiting their usefulness in studying individual behavioral differences.

Article Abstract

We investigate the reliability of individual differences of four quantities measured by magnetic resonance imaging-based multiparameter mapping (MPM): magnetization transfer saturation (MT), proton density (PD), longitudinal relaxation rate (R ), and effective transverse relaxation rate (R *). Four MPM datasets, two on each of two consecutive days, were acquired in healthy young adults. On Day 1, no repositioning occurred and on Day 2, participants were repositioned between MPM datasets. Using intraclass correlation effect decomposition (ICED), we assessed the contributions of session-specific, day-specific, and residual sources of measurement error. For whole-brain gray and white matter, all four MPM parameters showed high reproducibility and high reliability, as indexed by the coefficient of variation (CoV) and the intraclass correlation (ICC). However, MT, PD, R , and R * differed markedly in the extent to which reliability varied across brain regions. MT and PD showed high reliability in almost all regions. In contrast, R and R * showed low reliability in some regions outside the basal ganglia, such that the sum of the measurement error estimates in our structural equation model was higher than estimates of between-person differences. In addition, in this sample of healthy young adults, the four MPM parameters showed very little variability over four measurements but differed in how well they could assess between-person differences. We conclude that R and R * might carry only limited person-specific information in some regions of the brain in healthy young adults, and, by implication, might be of restricted utility for studying associations to between-person differences in behavior in those regions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9248308PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hbm.25870DOI Listing

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