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Title: The Effects of Acetazolamide on the Evaluation of Cerebral Hemodynamics and Functional Connectivity Using Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent MR Imaging in Patients with Chronic Steno-Occlusive Disease of the Anterior Circulation. Author: Wu J, Dehkharghani S, Nahab F, Allen J, Qiu D. Journal: AJNR Am J Neuroradiol; 2017 Jan; 38(1):139-145. PubMed ID: 27758776. Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Measuring cerebrovascular reactivity with the use of vasodilatory stimuli, such as acetazolamide, is useful for chronic cerebrovascular steno-occlusive disease. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of acetazolamide on the assessment of hemodynamic impairment and functional connectivity by using noninvasive resting-state blood oxygen level-dependent MR imaging. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A 20-minute resting-state blood oxygen level-dependent MR imaging scan was acquired with infusion of acetazolamide starting at 5 minutes after scan initiation. A recently developed temporal-shift analysis technique was applied on blood oxygen level-dependent MR imaging data before and after acetazolamide infusion to identify regions with hemodynamic impairment, and the results were compared by using contrast agent-based DSC perfusion imaging as the reference standard. Functional connectivity was compared with and without correction on the signal by using information from temporal-shift analysis, before and after acetazolamide infusion. RESULTS: Visually, temporal-shift analysis of blood oxygen level-dependent MR imaging data identified regions with compromised hemodynamics as defined by DSC, though performance deteriorated in patients with bilateral disease. The Dice similarity coefficient between temporal-shift and DSC maps was higher before (0.487 ± 0.150 by using the superior sagittal sinus signal as a reference for temporal-shift analysis) compared with after acetazolamide administration (0.384 ± 0.107) (P = .006, repeated-measures ANOVA). Functional connectivity analysis with temporal-shift correction identified brain network nodes that were otherwise missed. The accuracy of functional connectivity assessment decreased after acetazolamide administration (P = .015 for default mode network, repeated-measures ANOVA). CONCLUSIONS: Temporal-shift analysis of blood oxygen level-dependent MR imaging can identify brain regions with hemodynamic compromise in relation to DSC among patients with chronic cerebrovascular disease. The use of acetazolamide reduces the accuracy of temporal-shift analysis and network connectivity evaluation.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]