Title: Introduction to Neuroimaging
1Introduction to Neuroimaging
Aaron S. Field, MD, PhD Assistant Professor of
Radiology Neuroradiology Section University of
WisconsinMadison
Updated 7/17/07
2Neuroimaging Modalities
- Magnetic Resonance (MR)
- MR Angiography/Venography (MRA/MRV)
- Diffusion and Diffusion Tensor MR
- Perfusion MR
- MR Spectroscopy (MRS)
- Functional MR (fMRI)
- Nuclear Medicine
- Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography
(SPECT) - Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
- Radiography (X-Ray)
- Fluoroscopy (guided procedures)
- Angiography
- Diagnostic
- Interventional
- Myelography
- Ultrasound (US)
- Gray-Scale
- Color Doppler
- Computed Tomography (CT)
- CT Angiography (CTA)
- Perfusion CT
- CT Myelography
Duplex
3Radiography (X-Ray)
4Radiography (X-Ray)
- Primarily used for spine
- Trauma
- Degenerative Dz
- Post-op
5Fluoroscopy (Real-Time X-Ray)
- Fluoro-guided procedures
- Angiography
- Myelography
6Fluoroscopy (Real-Time X-Ray)
7Fluoroscopy (Real-Time X-Ray)
Digital Subtraction Angiography
8Fluoroscopy (Real-Time X-Ray)
Digital Subtraction Angiography
9Digital Subtraction Angiography
Indications
- Aneurysms, vascular malformations and fistulae
- Vessel stenosis, thrombosis, dissection,
pseudoaneurysm - Stenting, embolization, thrombolysis (mechanical
and pharmacologic) - Ability to intervene
- Time-resolved blood flow dynamics (arterial,
capillary, venous phases) - High spatial and temporal resolution
- Invasive, risk of vascular injury and stroke
- Iodinated contrast and ionizing radiation
Advantages
Disadvantages
10Fluoroscopy (Real-Time X-Ray)
Myelography
Lumbar or cervical puncture Inject contrast
intrathecally with fluoroscopic
guidance Follow-up with post-myelo CT (CT
myelogram)
11Myelography
Indications
- Spinal stenosis, nerve root compression
- CSF leak
- MRI inadequate or contraindicated
- Defines extent of subarachnoid space, identifies
spinal block - Invasive, complications (CSF leak, headache,
contrast reaction, etc.) - Ionizing radiation and iodinated contrast
- Limited coverage
Advantages
Disadvantages
12Ultrasound
13Ultrasound
Indications
- Carotid stenosis
- Vasospasm - Transcranial Doppler (TCD)
- Infant brain imaging (open fontanelle acoustic
window) - Noninvasive, well-tolerated, readily available,
low cost - Quantitates blood velocity
- Reveals morphology (stability) of atheromatous
plaques - Severe stenosis may appear occluded
- Limited coverage, difficult through air/bone
- Operator dependent
Advantages
Disadvantages
14Ultrasound Gray Scale
Gray-scale image of carotid artery
15Ultrasound Gray Scale
Plaque in ICA
Gray-scale image of carotid artery
16Ultrasound - Color Doppler
Peak Systolic Velocity (cm/sec) ICA Stenosis
( diameter) 125 225 50 70 225
350 70 90 gt350 gt90
17Computed Tomography (CT)
18Computed Tomography
A CT image is a pixel-by-pixel map of X-ray beam
attenuation (essentially density) in
Hounsfield
Units (HU)
HUwater 0
Bright hyper-attenuating or hyper-dense
19Computed Tomography
Typical HU Values
Air 1000 Fat 100 to 40 Water 0 Other
fluids (e.g. CSF) 020 White matter 2035 Gray
matter 3040 Blood clot 5575 Calcification gt1
50 Bone 1000 Metallic foreign body gt1000
Brain
20Computed Tomography
Attenuation High or Low?
- High
- Blood, calcium
- Less fluid / more tissue
- Low
- Fat, air
- More fluid / less tissue
Air 1000 Fat 100 to 40 Water 0 Other
fluids 020 White matter 2035 Gray
matter 3040 Blood clot 5575 Calcification gt1
50 Bone 1000 Metallic foreign body gt1000
21(No Transcript)
22Computed Tomography
Soft Tissue Window Bone Window
23Computed Tomography
24Computed Tomography
Scan axially
stack and re-slice in any plane
2D Recons
25CT Indications
- Skull and skull base, vertebrae
- (trauma, bone lesions)
- Ventricles
- (hydrocephalus, shunt placement)
- Intracranial masses, mass effects
- (headache, N/V, visual symptoms, etc.)
- Hemorrhage, ischemia
- (stroke, mental status change)
- Calcification
- (lesion characterization)
26Skull and skull base, vertebrae
Fractures
27Skull and skull base, vertebrae
Multiple Myeloma
Osteoma
28Ventricles
Hydrocephalus
29Intracranial masses, mass effects
Solid mass
Cystic mass
30Intracranial masses, mass effects
L hemisphere swelling
Generalized swelling
31Acute Hemorrhage
Intraparenchymal Subarachnoid
Subdural Epidural
32Acute Ischemia
Loss of gray-white distinction and swelling in
known arterial territory
33Calcification
Hyperparathyroidism
34CT Angiography
- Rapid IV contrast bolus
- Dynamic scanning during arterial phase
- Advanced 2D and 3D Reconstructions
- 2D multi-planar (sagittal, coronal)
- Volumerendered 3D recons
35CT Angiography - Head
36CT Angiography - Head
Circle of Willis
Vascular Malformations
Aneurysms
37CT Angiography - Neck
Carotid bifurcations
Vertebral arteries
Aortic arch
38CT Angiography 3D Volume Rendering
39CT Angiography - Indications
- Atherosclerosis
- Thromboembolism
- Vascular dissection
- Aneurysms
- Vascular malformations
- Penetrating trauma
40CT Perfusion
41Hemodynamic Parameters Derived From
Concentration-Time Curves
Bolus arrival
Vein
Artery
42Hemodynamic Parameter Maps
Transit Time (sec)
Blood Flow (mL/min/g)
Blood Volume (mL/g)
43CT Myelography
- Spinal CT immediately following conventional
myelogram - Cross-sectional view of spinal canal along with
spinal cord and nerve roots - Assess spinal stenosis/nerve root compression
(e.g. disc
herniation, vertebral fracture, neoplasm)
44CT Myelography
45CT Myelography
46Magnetic Resonance (MR)
Hydrogen proton in water or fat
MRI
47Magnetic Resonance Imaging
48RF Radio Frequency energy
Received signal
magnetic field
49MRI Safety The Magnet is Always On!
50Magnetic Resonance Safety
MRI Safety Test Will it Move? Torque? Get
hot? Pass a current? Malfunction? Become a
projectile? Get stuck in scanner?
- Typically safe
- Orthopedic hardware
- Surgical clips, staples, sutures (older devices
must be checked!) - Intravascular stents/filters
- Typically unsafe
- Cardiac pacemakers (and other
electrical devices) - Some older aneurysm clips
- Metal fragments in orbit (1 case
report) - Oxygen tanks, carts, chairs, stools, IV poles,
gurneys, etc. - Some cosmetics, tattoos, jewelry, hairpins, etc.
- Pager, watch, wallet, ID badge, pen, keys,
pocketknife, etc.
This is an incomplete list and there are many
exceptions to every rule When in doubt,
check it out!
51Magnetic Resonance
Excited protons relax back to equilibrium
T2
T1
Relaxation rates depend on local molecular
environment
52Magnetic Resonance
53Magnetic Resonance
T2
T1
Arachnoid Cyst
54Magnetic Resonance
T2 T2 w/ fat suppression
55Magnetic Resonance
T2 T2 w/ fat suppression
56Magnetic Resonance
T2 T2 w/ water
suppression
(T2-FLAIR)
57Magnetic Resonance
Accentuating blood/calcium
blooming
T2
T2
58Diffusion MR Imaging
NORMAL
CYTOTOXIC EDEMA (Acute Ischemia)
Diffusion ? MR Signal ?
59Magnetic Resonance
Imaging Diffusion
DWI
Highly sensitive to acute ischemia within a
few hours! No other imaging is more sensitive to
acute ischemia although perfusion imaging
reveals hypoperfused tissue at risk for
ischemia
Acute left MCA infarction
60Magnetic Resonance Angiography
Axial source images
reformatted to maximum intensity projections
(MIP) Multiple projections allow 3D-like display
No need for IV contrast!
61Time-Resolved MRA (TRICKS)
IV contrast bolus reveals temporal dynamics
62Magnetic Resonance Angiography with Perfusion MR
MRA Perfusion MR
63Magnetic Resonance
Tissue contrast in MR may be based on
- Proton density
- Water/fat/protein content
- Metabolic compounds (MR Spectroscopy)
- e.g. Choline, creatine, N-acetylaspartate,
lactate - Magnetic properties of specific molecules
- e.g. Hemoglobin
- Diffusion of water
- Perfusion (capillary blood flow)
- Bulk flow (large vessels, CSF)
64IV Contrast in Neuroimaging
- CT Iodine-based
- Iodine is highly attenuating of X-ray beam
(bright on CT) - MRI Gadolinium-based
- Gadolinium is a paramagnetic metal that hastens
T1 relaxation of nearby water protons (bright on
T1-weighted images) - Tissue that gets brighter with IV contrast is
said to enhance (Brightness, in and of itself,
is not enhancement!) - Enhancement reflects the vascularity of tissue,
but - The blood-brain barrier keeps IV contrast out of
the brain! - Enhancement implies BBB is absent or
dysfunctional - Remember Some brain anatomy lives outside the
BBB
65IV Contrast in Neuroimaging
Enhancement
- Vessels
- Meninges
- pachy dura
- lepto pia-arachnoid
- Circumventricular organs (structures outside BBB)
- Pineal gland
- Pituitary gland
- Choroid plexus
- Absent/leaky BBB
- Some tumors
- Inflammation
- Infarction
-
66Enhancement
T1
T1C
Hemorrhagic melanoma metastasis
67IV Contrast Is it Indicated?
Typically not
Typically yes
- Trauma
- R/O hemorrhage
- Hydrocephalus
- Dementia
- Epilepsy
- Neoplasm
- Infection
- Vascular disease
- Inflammatory disease
Always best to provide detailed
indication! Radiologist will protocol exam
accordingly
68MR vs. CT
CT
MR
- Advantages
- Simpler, cheaper, more accessible
- Tolerated by claustrophobics
- No absolute contraindications
- Fewer pitfalls in interpretation
- Better than MR for bone detail
- Disadvantages
- Ionizing radiation
- IV contrast complications
- Need recons for multi-planar
- Limited range of tissue contrasts
- Advantages
- Much broader palette of tissue contrasts
(including functional and molecular) yields
greater anatomic detail and more comprehensive
analysis of pathology - No ionizing radiation
- Direct multi-planar imaging
- IV contrast better tolerated (in most pts.)
- Disadvantages
- Higher cost, limited access
- Difficult for unstable patients
- Several absolute contraindications (cardiac
pacer, some aneurysm clips, etc.) - Claustrophobics may need sedation
- Image interpretation more challenging
- Lacks bone detail
69Introduction to Neuroimaging
Aaron S. Field, MD, PhD Assistant Professor of
Radiology Neuroradiology Section University of
WisconsinMadison