Assessing Arterial Patterns in the Motor Cortex With 7 Tesla Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Vessel Distance Mapping
Grazia Mietzner, Lilli Lümkemann, Frank Schreiber, Jascha Brüggemann, Abrar Benramadan, Marwa Al‐Dubai, Alessandro Sciarra, Christoph Knoll, Esther Kuehn, Oliver Speck, Stefanie Schreiber, Hendrik Mattern

TL;DR
This study uses 7 Tesla MRI and vessel distance mapping to noninvasively analyze blood vessel patterns in the motor cortex of living humans.
Contribution
The study introduces noninvasive in vivo assessment of motor cortex arterial supply patterns using 7T MRI and VDM, previously only possible postmortem.
Findings
Three-, four-, and five-vessel patterns were observed with varying prevalence in the motor cortex.
Vessel dominance showed significant variability, with no significant effect on motor cortex thickness.
Noninvasive mapping of vascular territories enables future studies on vascular reserve in neurodegenerative diseases.
Abstract
Leveraging high‐resolution 7 T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and vessel distance mapping (VDM), the arterial supply patterns and dominances of the motor cortex, which could previously only be studied postmortem, were assessed in vivo and fully noninvasively. Beyond vessel patterns and dominances, the potential relation between the vascularization and the motor cortex thickness was studied. Twenty‐one healthy participants underwent 7 T MRI scans to map arterial supply and motor cortex at 0.45 mm isotropic resolution. The motor cortex vasculature was segmented manually with vessel‐specific labels. VDM was utilized to estimate the vessel‐specific supply regions and, subsequently, assess vessel patterns and dominances. Statistical tests were applied to test if the vasculature impacts mean motor cortical thickness estimates. Vessel patterns, that is the presence of supplying vessels, were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced MRI Techniques and Applications · Cerebrovascular and Carotid Artery Diseases · Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications
