Title
Q-space trajectory imaging for multidimensional diffusion MRI of the human brain.
Abstract
This work describes a new diffusion MR framework for imaging and modeling of microstructure that we call q-space trajectory imaging (QTI). The QTI framework consists of two parts: encoding and modeling. First we propose q-space trajectory encoding, which uses time-varying gradients to probe a trajectory in q-space, in contrast to traditional pulsed field gradient sequences that attempt to probe a point in q-space. Then we propose a microstructure model, the diffusion tensor distribution (DTD) model, which takes advantage of additional information provided by QTI to estimate a distributional model over diffusion tensors. We show that the QTI framework enables microstructure modeling that is not possible with the traditional pulsed gradient encoding as introduced by Stejskal and Tanner. In our analysis of QTI, we find that the well-known scalar b-value naturally extends to a tensor-valued entity, i.e., a diffusion measurement tensor, which we call the b-tensor. We show that b-tensors of rank 2 or 3 enable estimation of the mean and covariance of the DTD model in terms of a second order tensor (the diffusion tensor) and a fourth order tensor. The QTI framework has been designed to improve discrimination of the sizes, shapes, and orientations of diffusion microenvironments within tissue. We derive rotationally invariant scalar quantities describing intuitive microstructural features including size, shape, and orientation coherence measures. To demonstrate the feasibility of QTI on a clinical scanner, we performed a small pilot study comparing a group of five healthy controls with five patients with schizophrenia. The parameter maps derived from QTI were compared between the groups, and 9 out of the 14 parameters investigated showed differences between groups. The ability to measure and model the distribution of diffusion tensors, rather than a quantity that has already been averaged within a voxel, has the potential to provide a powerful paradigm for the study of complex tissue architecture.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2016.02.039
NeuroImage
Keywords
Field
DocType
Diffusion MRI,q-space,DTI,Microscopic anisotropy,Microscopic fractional anisotropy μFA,QTI,q-space trajectory,SDE,DDE,TDE,Diffusion tensor distribution
Voxel,Diffusion MRI,Tensor,Scalar (physics),Algorithm,Cognitive psychology,Coherence (physics),Invariant (mathematics),Geometry,Trajectory,Mathematics,Covariance
Journal
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
135
1053-8119
19
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.67
0
12
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Carl-fredrik Westin12040173.83
Hans Knutsson273777.13
Ofer Pasternak316214.31
Filip Szczepankiewicz4866.14
Evren Ozarslan5251.28
Danielle van Westen6703.79
Cecilia Mattisson7190.67
Mats Bogren8190.67
Lauren O’Donnell952233.06
Marek Kubicki1039736.50
Daniel Topgaard11552.70
Markus Nilsson121146.82