| Literature DB >> 25013504 |
Marina Hara1, Masahiro Kuroda2, Yuichi Ohmura2, Hidenobu Matsuzaki3, Tomoki Kobayashi2, Jun Murakami3, Kazunori Katashima1, Masakazu Ashida1, Seiichiro Ohno4, Jun-Ichi Asaumi5.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to create a new phantom for a 3 Tesla (3T) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) device for the calculation of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) using diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), and to mimic the ADC values of normal and tumor tissues at various temperatures, including the physiological body temperature of 37°C. The phantom was produced using several concentrations of sucrose from 0 to 1.2 M, and the DWI was performed using various phantom temperatures. The accurate ADC values were calculated using the DWIs of the phantoms, and an empirical formula was developed to calculate the ADC values of the phantoms from an arbitrary sucrose concentration and arbitrary phantom temperature. The empirical formula was able to produce ADC values ranging between 0.33 and 3.02×10-3 mm2/sec, which covered the range of ADC values of the human body that have been measured clinically by 3T MRI in previous studies. The phantom and empirical formula developed in this study may be available to mimic the ADC values of the clinical human lesion by 3T MRI.Entities:
Keywords: 3 Tesla; apparent diffusion coefficient value; diffusion-weighted imaging; magnetic resonance imaging; phantom; sucrose
Year: 2014 PMID: 25013504 PMCID: PMC4081373 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2014.2187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1Phantom and methods used for the experiments. (A) Sucrose phantom in its case and (B) case container. Up to 16 sucrose phantoms could be placed into this container filled with 0.9 M sucrose solutions containing 0.03% (w/w) NaN3. (C) The heating box made of Styrofoam, which encloses the phantom case container. The container could be heated in the gantry of a magnetic resonance imaging scanner via a tube that was connected to a (D) circulating temperature-regulated water bath. (E) The optical fiber thermometer for temperature monitoring, which was placed into the phantoms. (F) The region of interest was 7.27 mm2 at the position of the thermometer on each diffusion-weighted image.
Figure 2Calculation of apparent diffusion coefficient values of a 0.2 M phantom at 37.09°C. The vertical axis indicates the logarithm of the signal intensity of the regions of interest in the diffusion-weighted image of the phantom. The horizontal axis indicates b values. ‘♦’ represents the data that were used for the least-squares method to obtain the regression line and the R2 value. ‘⋄’ represents the data that were not used for the least-squares method to obtain the regression line and the R2 value.
Figure 3The ADC values of the phantoms and the development of an empirical formula to calculate the ADC values. (A) The change of ADC values by temperature. The vertical axis indicates the ADC values and the horizontal axis indicates the phantom temperature. Sucrose phantom concentrations of ⋄, 0; ■, 0.2; ▲, 0.4; ×, 0.6; *, 0.8; ●, 1.0; and +, 1.2 M. Each straight line indicates a first-order approximation of the correlation between the ADC values and the phantom temperature for each sucrose concentration. The (B) first-order coefficients and (C) intercepts of these linear equations are plotted. Each R2 value for the first-order approximation was within the range of 0.9379–0.9801. (B) The correlations between the sucrose concentrations and the first-order coefficients of linear equations from the first-order approximation. Black diamonds indicate first-order coefficients, while the curved line indicates the fourth-order approximation, with R2=0.9638. (C) The correlations between sucrose concentrations and the intercepts of the linear equations from the first-order approximation. Black diamonds indicate intercepts, while the curved line indicates the fourth-order approximation, with R2=0.9862. ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient.
Figure 4Calculated ADC values and validation of the accuracy using the empirical formula. The vertical axis indicates the ADC values and the horizontal axes indicate sucrose concentration and phantom temperature, respectively. Black cubes in each figure indicate the ADC values that were calculated from the empirical formula. (A) The ADC values which were calculated from the empirical formula. (B) The correlation between the predetermined and calculated ADC values using the empirical formula. The crosses (×) indicate the ADC values used to make the empirical formula. (C) The correlation between the ADC values measured using verification phantoms and the ADC values calculated using the empirical formula. The crosses (×) and vertical lines indicate the mean ± three standard deviations of the ADC values measured using verification phantoms. ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient.
Sucrose concentration mimicking ADC values of human body.
| Regions (ref) | Mean ADC values, ×10−3 mm2/sec | Sucrose concentration, M |
|---|---|---|
| Lesions | ||
| Brain | ||
| Lymphoma ( | 0.62b | ~1.2 |
| Head and neck | ||
| Squamous cell carcinoma ( | 1.10 | 0.86 |
| Thyroid gland | ||
| Malignant tumor ( | 0.81c | 1.07 |
| Benign tumor ( | 1.55c | 0.61 |
| Pancreas | ||
| Neoplastic cystic lesion ( | 2.60b | 0.13 |
| Mucinous cystic lesion ( | 2.60b | 0.13 |
| Uterine cervix | ||
| Malignant tumor ( | 0.88b | 1.02 |
| Ovary | ||
| Malignant tumor ( | 1.04a | 0.91 |
| Benign tumor ( | 1.15a | 0.84 |
| Prostate | ||
| Peripheral zone tissue | ||
| Malignant tumor ( | 0.85d | 1.04 |
| Benign tumor ( | 1.17d | 0.82 |
| Transition zone tissue | ||
| Malignant tumor ( | 0.84d | 1.05 |
| Benign tumor ( | 1.08d | 0.88 |
| Normal tissues | ||
| Brain | ||
| White matter ( | 0.76b | 1.11 |
| Gray matter ( | 0.78b | 1.10 |
| Muscle | ||
| Gluteus ( | 1.24a | 0.78 |
| Prostate | ||
| Central gland ( | 1.19d | 0.81 |
| Peripheral gland ( | 1.54d | 0.61 |
| Tyroid tissue ( | 1.32c | 0.73 |
b values at a0–800, b0–1,000, c0–1,500 and d0–2,000 sec/mm2. ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient.