Using carpet plots to analyze blood transit times in the brain during hypercapnic challenge magnetic resonance imaging

Front Physiol. 2023 Feb 15:14:1134804. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2023.1134804. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Blood arrival time and blood transit time are useful metrics in characterizing hemodynamic behaviors in the brain. Functional magnetic resonance imaging in combination with a hypercapnic challenge has been proposed as a non-invasive imaging tool to determine blood arrival time and replace dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC) magnetic resonance imaging, a current gold-standard imaging tool with the downsides of invasiveness and limited repeatability. Using a hypercapnic challenge, blood arrival times can be computed by cross-correlating the administered CO2 signal with the fMRI signal, which increases during elevated CO2 due to vasodilation. However, whole-brain transit times derived from this method can be significantly longer than the known cerebral transit time for healthy subjects (nearing 20 s vs. the expected 5-6 s). To address this unrealistic measurement, we here propose a novel carpet plot-based method to compute improved blood transit times derived from hypercapnic blood oxygen level dependent fMRI, demonstrating that the method reduces estimated blood transit times to an average of 5.32 s. We also investigate the use of hypercapnic fMRI with cross-correlation to compute the venous blood arrival times in healthy subjects and compare the computed delay maps with DSC-MRI time to peak maps using the structural similarity index measure (SSIM). The strongest delay differences between the two methods, indicated by low structural similarity index measure, were found in areas of deep white matter and the periventricular region. SSIM measures throughout the remainder of the brain reflected a similar arrival sequence derived from the two methods despite the exaggerated spread of voxel delays computed using CO2 fMRI.

Keywords: carpet plot; cerebral transit time; dynamic susceptibility contrast imaging; hypercapnia fMRI; structural similarity index.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) R21 DA032746 (BBF), NIH R21AG068962 (YT), and NIH/National Institute on Aging R21 AG070383-01 (LMH); in part, with support from the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (the Pilot Funding for Research Use of Core Facilities).