Meeting Banner
Abstract #0662

Longitudinal MRA Tortuosity Metric Measurements in a Population-based Study

Ziyang Xu1, Melissa Caughey2, Sile Wang1, Xinwei Zhou3, and Ye Qiao1
1Department of Radiology, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD, United States, 2Joint Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of North Carolina & North Carolina State University, Chapel Hill, NC, United States, 3Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD, United States

Synopsis

Keywords: Dementia, Blood vessels, MRA

Motivation: Current understanding of dolichoectasia has largely been drawn from patients with clinical need for brain imaging in the cross-sectional settings.

Goal(s): To characterize the longitudinal changes in brain MRA geometry vessel metrics and their associations with demographic variables, imaging biomarkers and cognitive performance.

Approach: Basic demographic and clinical information were compared between two groups w/wo MRI metric measurement change using two-sample t-tests. The associations between MRI metrics and cognitive decline or incidence dementia were tested using logistic regression.

Results: MRA geometry vessel metric change was not associated with the cognitive decline over time (3.6-8 years). Baseline cognitive score can predict future cognitive performance.

Impact: Clinical predictors of worsening dolichoectasia are unknown. Although MRA geometry vessel metric changes are not significant with cognitive decline, demographic variables show significance on some metric difference. Baseline cognitive score can also predict cognitive change.

How to access this content:

For one year after publication, abstracts and videos are only open to registrants of this annual meeting. Registrants should use their existing login information. Non-registrant access can be purchased via the ISMRM E-Library.

After one year, current ISMRM & ISMRT members get free access to both the abstracts and videos. Non-members and non-registrants must purchase access via the ISMRM E-Library.

After two years, the meeting proceedings (abstracts) are opened to the public and require no login information. Videos remain behind password for access by members, registrants and E-Library customers.

Click here for more information on becoming a member.

Keywords