%0 Journal Article %T Amide proton transfer MRI at 9.4 T for differentiating tissue acidosis in a rodent model of ischemic stroke. %A Jin T %A Wang J %A Chung J %A Hitchens TK %A Sun D %A Mettenburg J %A Wang P %J Magn Reson Med %V 0 %N 0 %D 2024 Jun 23 %M 38923094 %F 3.737 %R 10.1002/mrm.30194 %X OBJECTIVE: Differentiating ischemic brain damage is critical for decision making in acute stroke treatment for better outcomes. We examined the sensitivity of amide proton transfer (APT) MRI, a pH-weighted imaging technique, to achieve this differentiation.
METHODS: In a rat stroke model, the ischemic core, oligemia, and the infarct-growth region (IGR) were identified by tracking the progression of the lesions. APT MRI signals were measured alongside ADC, T1, and T2 maps to evaluate their sensitivity in distinguishing ischemic tissues. Additionally, stroke under hyperglycemic conditions was studied.
RESULTS: The APT signal in the IGR decreased by about 10% shortly after stroke onset, and further decreased to 35% at 5 h, indicating a progression from mild to severe acidosis as the lesion evolved into infarction. Although ADC, T1, and T2 contrasts can only detect significant differences between the IGR and oligemia for a portion of the stroke duration, APT contrast consistently differentiates between them at all time points. However, the contrast to variation ratio at 1 h is only about 20% of the contrast to variation ratio between the core and normal tissues, indicating limited sensitivity. In the ischemic core, the APT signal decreases to about 45% and 33% of normal tissue level at 1 h for the normoglycemic and hyperglycemic groups, respectively, confirming more severe acidosis under hyperglycemia.
CONCLUSIONS: The sensitivity of APT MRI is high in detecting severe acidosis of the ischemic core but is much lower in detecting mild acidosis, which may affect the accuracy of differentiation between the IGR and oligemia.