NeuroImage (Aug 2021)

Strain Tensor Imaging: Cardiac-induced brain tissue deformation in humans quantified with high-field MRI

  • Jacob Jan Sloots,
  • Geert Jan Biessels,
  • Alberto de Luca,
  • Jaco J.M. Zwanenburg

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 236
p. 118078

Abstract

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The cardiac cycle induces blood volume pulsations in the cerebral microvasculature that cause subtle deformation of the surrounding tissue. These tissue deformations are highly relevant as a potential source of information on the brain's microvasculature as well as of tissue condition. Besides, cyclic brain tissue deformations may be a driving force in clearance of brain waste products. We have developed a high-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique to capture these tissue deformations with full brain coverage and sufficient signal-to-noise to derive the cardiac-induced strain tensor on a voxel by voxel basis, that could not be assessed non-invasively before. We acquired the strain tensor with 3 mm isotropic resolution in 9 subjects with repeated measurements for 8 subjects. The strain tensor yielded both positive and negative eigenvalues (principle strains), reflecting the Poison effect in tissue. The principle strain associated with expansion followed the known funnel shaped brain motion pattern pointing towards the foramen magnum. Furthermore, we evaluate two scalar quantities from the strain tensor: the volumetric strain and octahedral shear strain. These quantities showed consistent patterns between subjects, and yielded repeatable results: the peak systolic volumetric strain (relative to end-diastolic strain) was 4.19⋅10−4 ± 0.78⋅10−4 and 3.98⋅10−4 ± 0.44⋅10−4 (mean ± standard deviation for first and second measurement, respectively), and the peak octahedral shear strain was 2.16⋅10−3 ± 0.31⋅10−3 and 2.31⋅10−3 ± 0.38⋅10−3, for the first and second measurement, respectively. The volumetric strain was typically highest in the cortex and lowest in the periventricular white matter, while anisotropy was highest in the subcortical white matter and basal ganglia. This technique thus reveals new, regional information on the brain's cardiac-induced deformation characteristics, and has the potential to advance our understanding of the role of microvascular pulsations in health and disease.

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