Meeting Banner
Abstract #0424

Improved Subthalamic Nucleus Visualization Using Quantitative Susceptibility Imaging

Sarah Eskreis-Winkler1, 2, Tian Liu3, Weiwei Chen4, Michael Kaplitt1, A. John Tsiouris1, Yi Wang1

1Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY, United States; 2New York Hospital Queens, Flushing, NY, United States; 3MedImageMetric LLC; 4Tongji Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China

Neurosurgeons performing deep brain stimulation on Parkinsons disease patients must pintpoint the precise location of the subthalamic nucleus -- however this is often difficult to do on T2* and T2 weighted imaging. Here we evaluate the ability of quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM), a recently developed MR imaging technique, to better locate the STN than T2*W and T2W imaging. We find that QSM provides a better contrast-to-noise ratio (a 6-fold improvement over T2*W, and an 8-fold improvement over T2W) for depicting the STN than conventional MR imaging.

Keywords

acquisitions appears assess assigned averaging background bandwidth better brain calculating china college contrast coronal correct deep delineating depicting deposition developed deviation difficult dipole disease distinguishing double echoes electrode enabled evenly example fast flushing fold gradient healthy helpful hospital hypothesis identical illustrated implant improved improvement included indicated intensity inversion iron john location mapping materials measured medical minus minutes moderate morphology must neighboring neurosurgeons noise nucleus often paired patients peak people pinpoint planning plot plots poor precise presence procedures quality quantitative queens radiologist rank recently reconstructed reported republic resolution reviewed scanner science score scores sensitive signed since site slices spaced spatial spin stimulating stimulation subject summarized susceptibility table taken target technology utilizing versus visible visualization visualize visualized volunteers