Estimating axon radius using diffusion-relaxation MRI: calibrating a surface-based relaxation model with histology
Muhamed Barakovic, Marco Pizzolato, Chantal M.W. Tax, Umesh, Rudrapatna, Stefano Magon, Tim B. Dyrby, Cristina Granziera, Jean-Philippe, Thiran, Derek K. Jones, and Erick J. Canales-Rodr\'iguez

TL;DR
This study explores a new MRI-based method to estimate small axon radii by calibrating a surface relaxation model with histology, potentially improving non-invasive brain microstructure assessment.
Contribution
It introduces a surface-based relaxation model calibrated with histology to estimate axon radius from diffusion MRI data, addressing the challenge of detecting small axons.
Findings
Relaxation times correlate with histological axon radius
The calibration accurately predicts axon radius in corpus callosum regions
The model explains intra-axonal relaxation behavior
Abstract
Axon radius is a potential biomarker for brain diseases and a crucial tissue microstructure parameter that determines the speed of action potentials. Diffusion MRI (dMRI) allows non-invasive estimation of axon radius, but accurately estimating the radius of axons in the human brain is challenging. Most axons in the brain have a radius below one micrometer, which falls below the sensitivity limit of dMRI signals even when using the most advanced human MRI scanners. Therefore, new MRI methods that are sensitive to small axon radii are needed. In this proof-of-concept investigation, we examine whether a surface-based axonal relaxation process could mediate a relationship between intra-axonal T2 and T1 times and inner axon radius, as measured using postmortem histology. A unique in vivo human diffusion-T1-T2 relaxation dataset was acquired on a 3T MRI scanner with ultra-strong diffusion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications · Bone and Joint Diseases
