van der Thiel, M.Rodriguez, C.Giannakopoulos, P.Burke, M. X.Lebel, R. MarcGninenko, N.Van de Ville, D.Haller, S.2020-03-012020-03-012020-03-012018-08-0110.3174/ajnr.A5717https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/166582WOS:000441271400015BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Multidelay arterial spin-labeling is a promising emerging method in clinical practice. The effect of imaging parameters in multidelay arterial spin-labeling on estimated cerebral blood flow measurements remains unknown. We directly compared 3-delay versus 7-delay sequences, assessing the difference in the estimated transit time and blood flow. MATERIALS AND METHODS:This study included 87 cognitively healthy controls (78.7 3.8 years of age; 49 women). We assessed delay and transit time-uncorrected and transit time-corrected CBF maps. Data analysis included voxelwise permutation-based between-sequence comparisons of 3-delay versus 7-delay, within-sequence comparison of transit time-uncorrected versus transit time-corrected maps, and average CBF calculations in regions that have been shown to differ. RESULTS:The 7-delay sequence estimated a higher CBF value than the 3-delay for the transit time-uncorrected and transit time-corrected maps in regions corresponding to the watershed areas (transit time-uncorrected = 27.62 +/- 12.23 versus 24.58 +/- 11.70 mL/min/100 g, Cohen's d = 0.25; transit time-corrected = 33.48 +/- 14.92 versus 30.16 +/- 14.32 mL/min/100 g, Cohen's d = 0.23). In the peripheral regions of the brain, the estimated delay was found to be longer for the 3-delay sequence (1.52408 +/- 0.25236 seconds versus 1.47755 +/- 0.24242 seconds, Cohen's d = 0.19), while the inverse was found in the center of the brain (1.39388 +/- 0.22056 seconds versus 1.42565 +/- 0.21872 seconds, Cohen's d = 0.14). Moreover, 7-delay had lower hemispheric asymmetry. CONCLUSIONS:The results of this study support the necessity of standardizing acquisition parameters in multidelay arterial spin-labeling and identifying basic parameters as a confounding factor in CBF quantification studies. Our findings conclude that multidelay arterial spin-labeling sequences with a high number of delays estimate higher CBF values than those with a lower number of delays.Clinical NeurologyNeuroimagingRadiology, Nuclear Medicine & Medical ImagingNeurosciences & NeurologyRadiology, Nuclear Medicine & Medical ImagingmriinversionBrain Perfusion Measurements Using Multidelay Arterial Spin-Labeling Are Systematically Biased by the Number of Delaystext::journal::journal article::research article