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Pancreatic perfusion and arterial-transit-time quantification using pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling at 3T.

PURPOSE: To demonstrate the feasibility of noninvasively measuring pancreatic perfusion using pseudocontinuous arterial spin labeling (ASL) and to derive quantitative blood-flow and transit-time measurements in healthy volunteers.

METHODS: A pseudocontinuous ASL sequence with background suppression and a single-slice single-shot fast-spin-echo readout was acquired at 3 T in 10 subjects with a single standard postlabeling delay (PLD) of 1.5 s and in 4 additional subjects with 4 PLD from 0.7 to 2 s. An imaging synchronized breathing approach was used to minimize motion artifacts during the 3 min of acquisition. Scan-rescan reproducibility was assessed in 3 volunteers with single-delay ASL. Quantitative blood flow and arterial transit time (ATT) were derived and the impact of ATT correction was studied using either subject-specific ATT in the second group or an average ATT derived from the group with multidelay ASL for subjects with single-delay ASL.

RESULTS: Successful ASL acquisitions were performed in all volunteers. An average pancreatic blood flow of 201 ± 40 mL/100 g/min was measured in the single-delay group using an assumed ATT of 750 ms Average ATT measured in the multidelay group was 1029 ± 89 ms Using the longer, measured ATT reduced the measured flow to 162 ± 12 and 168 ± 28 mL/100 g/min with subject-specific or average ATT correction, respectively. ASL signal heterogeneities were observed at shorter PLD, potentially linked to its complex vascular supply and islet distribution.

CONCLUSIONS: ASL enables reliable measurement of pancreatic perfusion in healthy volunteers. It presents a valuable alternative to contrast-enhanced methods and may be useful for diagnosis and characterization of several inflammatory, metabolic, and neoplastic diseases affecting the pancreas.

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