A Framework for Jointly Assessing and Reducing Imaging Artefacts Automatically Using Texture Analysis and Total Variation Optimisation for Improving Perivascular Spaces Quantification in Brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Author(s):  
Jose Bernal ◽  
Maria Valdés-Hernández ◽  
Lucia Ballerini ◽  
Javier Escudero ◽  
Angela C. C. Jochems ◽  
...  
Stroke ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 51 (5) ◽  
pp. 1503-1506
Author(s):  
Angela C.C. Jochems ◽  
Gordon W. Blair ◽  
Michael S. Stringer ◽  
Michael J. Thrippleton ◽  
Una Clancy ◽  
...  

Background and Purpose— Perivascular spaces (PVS) around venules may help drain interstitial fluid from the brain. We examined relationships between suspected venules and PVS visible on brain magnetic resonance imaging. Methods— We developed a visual venular quantification method to examine the spatial relationship between venules and PVS. We recruited patients with lacunar stroke or minor nondisabling ischemic stroke and performed brain magnetic resonance imaging and retinal imaging. We quantified venules on gradient echo or susceptibility-weighted imaging and PVS on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging in the centrum semiovale and then determined overlap between venules and PVS. We assessed associations between venular count and patient demographic characteristics, vascular risk factors, small vessel disease features, retinal vessels, and venous sinus pulsatility. Results— Among 67 patients (69% men, 69.0±9.8 years), only 4.6% (range, 0%–18%) of venules overlapped with PVS. Total venular count increased with total centrum semiovale PVS count in 55 patients after accounting for venule-PVS overlap (β=0.468 [95% CI, 0.187–0.750]) and transverse sinus pulsatility (β=0.547 [95% CI, 0.309–0.786]) and adjusting for age, sex, and systolic blood pressure. Conclusions— Despite increases in both visible PVS and suspected venules, we found minimal spatial overlap between them in patients with sporadic small vessel disease, suggesting that most magnetic resonance imaging-visible centrum semiovale PVS are periarteriolar rather than perivenular.


Heart Rhythm ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 373-376 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl Georg Haeusler ◽  
Lydia Koch ◽  
Juliane Ueberreiter ◽  
Nalan Coban ◽  
Erdal Safak ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 125 (3) ◽  
pp. 237-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir Banović ◽  
Snježana Škrablin ◽  
Maja Banović ◽  
Marko Radoš ◽  
Snježana Gverić-Ahmetašević ◽  
...  

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