Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10712830 Magnetic Resonance Imaging 2005 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
Forty-one gliomas (WHO grades II-IV), six meningiomas and eight distant metastases were investigated. It was shown that the technique noninvasively provides information for separating different tumor types and characterizing their microenvironment. Fast permeability describes vessel permeability and was significantly increased in meningiomas as compared with intra-axial tumors. The corresponding volume of the fast enhancing compartment was significantly increased in meningiomas compared to all gliomas taken together. Slow permeability describes diffusion within the extravascular extracellular space and was significantly reduced in low-grade gliomas, indicating short diffusion distances. The slowly enhancing extravascular extracellular space was found to be increased in high-grade gliomas and distant metastases. Blood volume differed significantly among some tumor entities and glioma grades. Perfusion was shown to increase linearly with blood volume for volumes of up to 20%, flattening out thereafter. The scatter plots of extravascular extracellular volume and blood volume were shown to differ among the tumor entities.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Condensed Matter Physics
Authors
, , , , ,