WO2011047197A2 - Mr spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs - Google Patents
Mr spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs Download PDFInfo
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- WO2011047197A2 WO2011047197A2 PCT/US2010/052737 US2010052737W WO2011047197A2 WO 2011047197 A2 WO2011047197 A2 WO 2011047197A2 US 2010052737 W US2010052737 W US 2010052737W WO 2011047197 A2 WO2011047197 A2 WO 2011047197A2
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Definitions
- This disclosure relates to systems, processors, devices, and methods for measuring chemical constituents in tissue for diagnosing medical conditions. More specifically, it relates to systems, pulse sequences, signal and diagnostic processors, diagnostic displays, and related methods using novel application of nuclear magnetic resonance, including magnetic resonance spectroscopy, for diagnosing pain such as low back pain associated with degenerative disc disease.
- Magnetic resonance imaging is the primary standard of diagnostic care for back pain. An estimated ten million MRIs are done each year for spine, which is the single largest category of all MRIs at an estimated 26% of all MRIs performed. MRI in the context of back pain is sensitive to changes in disc and endplate hydration and structural morphology, and often yields clinically relevant diagnoses such as in setting of spondlyolesthesis and disc herniations with nerve root impingement (e.g. sciatica). In particular context of axial back pain, MRI is principally useful for indicating degree of disc degeneration. However, degree disc degeneration has not been well correlated to pain.
- a second line diagnostic exam called “provocative discography” (PD) is often performed after MRI exams in order to localize painful discs.
- This approach uses a needle injection of pressurized dye in awake patients in order to intentionally provoke pain.
- the patient's subjective reporting of pain level experienced during the injection, on increasing scale of 0-10, and concordancy to usual sensation of pain, is the primary diagnostic data used to determine diagnosis as a "positive discogram" - indicating painful disc - versus a "negative discogram” for a disc indicating it is not a source of the patient's chronic, severe back pain.
- This has significant limitations including invasiveness, pain, risks of disc damage, subjectivity, lack of standardization of technique.
- Controversies around PD remain, and in many regards are only growing, despite the on-going prevalence of the invasive, painful, subjective, harmful approach as the secondary standard of care following MRI.
- PD is performed an estimated 400,000 times annually world-wide, at an estimated total economic cost that exceeds $750 Million Dollars annually.
- the need for a non-invasive, painless, objective, non-significant risk, more efficient and cost-effective test to locate painful intervertebral discs of chronic, severe low back pain patients is urgent and growing.
- a non-invasive radiographic technique to accurately differentiate between discs that are painful and non-painful may offer significant guidance in directing treatments and developing an evidence-based approach to the care of patients with lumbar degenerative disc disease (DDD).
- DDD lumbar degenerative disc disease
- One aspect of the present disclosure is a MRS pulse sequence configured to generate and acquire a diagnostically useful MRS spectrum from a voxel located principally within an intervertebral disc of a patient.
- Another aspect of the present disclosure is an MRS signal processor that is configured to select a sub-set of multiple channel acquisitions received contemporaneously from multiple parallel acquisition channels, respectively, of a multi-channel detector assembly during a repetitive-frame MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest within a body of a subject.
- an MRS signal processor comprising a phase shift corrector configured to recognize and correct phase shifting within a repetitive multi-frame acquisition series acquired by a multi-channel detector assembly during an MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest within a body of a subject.
- a MRS signal processor comprising a frequency shift corrector configured to recognize and correct frequency shifting between multiple acquisition frames of a repetitive multi-frame acquisition series acquired within an acquisition detector channel of a multi-channel detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest within a body of a subject.
- a MRS signal processor comprising a frame editor configured to recognize at least one poor quality acquisition frame, as determined against at least one threshold criterion, within an acquisition channel of a repetitive multi-frame acquisition series received from a multi-channel detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest within a body of a subject.
- an MRS signal processor that comprises an apodizer to reduce the truncation effect on the sample data.
- the apodizer can be configured to apodize an MRS acquisition frame in the time domain otherwise generated and acquired by via an MRS aspect otherwise herein disclosed, and/or signal processed by one or more of the various MRS signal processor aspects also otherwise herein disclosed.
- Another aspect of the present disclosure is an MRS diagnostic processor configured to process information extracted from an MRS spectrum for a region of interest in a body of a subject, and to provide the processed information in a manner that is useful for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with the region of interest.
- an MRS system comprising an MRS pulse sequence, MRS signal processor, and MRS diagnostic processor, and which is configured to generate, acquire, and process an MRS spectrum representative of a region of interest in a body of a patient for providing diagnostically useful information associated with the region of interest.
- Still further aspects of the present disclosure comprise various MRS method aspects associated with the other MRS system, sequence, and processor aspects described above.
- FIGS. 1A-C show respective MRI images of an intervertebral disc region of a lumbar spine with overlay features representing a voxel prescription within a disc for performing a DDD-MRS exam according to one aspect of the disclosure, in coronal, sagittal, and axial imaging planes, respectively.
- FIG. 2 shows an example of the sectional deployment in one commercially available MR spine detector coil assembly, and with which certain aspects of the present disclosure may be configured to interface for cooperative operation and use, and have been so configured and used according to certain Examples provided elsewhere herein.
- FIG. 3 A shows an example of a CHESS water suppression pulse sequence diagram representing certain pulse sequence aspects contemplated by certain aspects of the present disclosure.
- FIG. 3B shows certain aspects of a combined CHESS - PRESS pulse sequence diagram also consistent with certain aspects of the present disclosure.
- FIG. 3C shows various different aspects of a combined CHESS - VSS- PRESS pulse sequence diagram also illustrative of certain aspects of the present disclosure.
- FIGS. 4A-B show two examples of respective planar views of a very selective saturation (VSS) prescription for a voxelated acquisition series in an intervertebral disc to be conducted via a DDD-MRS pulse sequence according to further aspects herein.
- VSS very selective saturation
- FIG. 5 shows Real (Sx) and imaginary (Sy) parts of an FID (right) that correspond to x and y components of the rotating magnetic moment M (left).
- FIG. 6 shows an amplitude plot of complex data from a standard MRS series acquisition of multiple frame repetitions typically acquired according to certain present embodiments, and shows amplitude of signal on the y-axis and time on the x-axis.
- FIG. 7 shows a graphical plot of an MRS absorption spectrum from an MRS pulse sequence acquisition from a lumbar disc using a 3T MR system, and which is produced from the transform of the complex data as the output average after combining all of 6 activated acquisition channels and averaging all frames, such as typically provided in display by a commercially available MRS system, and is generated without applying the various signal processing approaches of the present disclosure.
- FIG. 8 shows a graphical display of individual channel MRS spectra of all uncorrected channels of the same MRS acquisition featured in FIG. 7, and is shown as "real part squared" representation of the acquired MRS spectral data prior to combining the channels, and is also prior to pre-processing according to the signal processing approaches of the present disclosure.
- FIG. 9A shows a schematic flow diagram of one DDD-MRS processor configuration and processing flow therein, first operating in DDD-MRS signal processor mode by conducting optimal channel (coil) selection, phase correcting, then apodizing, then transforming domain (from time to frequency), then frame editing (editing out poor quality frames while retaining higher quality), then frequency error correction (correcting for frequency shifts), then averaging of all selected coils, and then followed by a DDD-MRS diagnostic processor and processing flow that comprises data extraction related to MRS spectral regions of diagnostic interest, then applying the diagnostic algorithm, then generating a diagnostic patient report.
- FIG. 9B shows a schematic flow diagram of further detail of various component parts of the DDD-MRS signal processor and respective steps taken thereby as shown more generally in FIG. 9A.
- FIG. 9C shows a schematic flow diagram of further detail of various component parts of the DDD-MRS diagnostic processor and processing flow taken thereby as also shown more generally in FIG. 9A.
- FIG. 10 shows a plot of phase angle pre- and post- phase correction for an acquisition series example, and as is similarly applied for a DDD-MRS acquisition such as for a disc according to certain aspects of the present disclosure.
- FIG. 11 shows the serial acquisition frame averages for each of 6 individual acquisition channels as shown in FIG. 8, but after phase correction consistent with the signal processing flow shown in FIGS. 9A-B and phase-correction approach illustrated in FIG. 10.
- FIG. 12 shows the frame-averaged real part squared MRS spectrum after combining the strongest two channels (channels 1 and 2) selected among the 6 phase- corrected frame-averaged channel spectra shown in FIG. 11 using a channel selection approach and criterion according to a further aspect of the current disclosure, but without frequency correction.
- FIG. 13 shows an example of a time-intensity plot for a DDD-MRS acquisition similar to that shown in FIG. 17D for the acquisition shown in FIGS. 7-8 and 11- 12, except that the plot of FIG. 13 relates to another MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of another lumbar disc in another subject with corrupted frames midway along the temporal acquisition series in order to illustrate frame editing according to other aspects of the disclosure.
- FIG. 14A shows confidence in frequency error estimate vs. MRS frames temporally acquired across an acquisition series for a disc, as plotted for the DDD-MRS series acquisition shown in different view in FIG. 13.
- FIG. 14B shows a frame by frame frequency error estimate of the acquisition series featured in FIG. 14A.
- FIG. 15 shows all 6 frame-averaged acquisition channels for the series acquisition conducted on the disc featured in FIGS. 13-14B, prior to correction.
- FIG. 16A shows phase corrected, frequency corrected, but not frame edited spectral average combining all of acquired series frames for channels 3 and 4 as combined after optimal channel selection, for the same series acquisition featured in FIGS. 13-15.
- FIG. 16B shows phase corrected, frequency corrected, and frame edited spectral average combining the partial retained frames not edited out from the acquired series for channels 3 and 4 as combined after optimal channel selection, also for the same series acquisition featured in FIGS. 13-15.
- FIG. 17A shows a 2-dimensional time-intensity plot similar to that shown in FIG. 13, but for yet another DDD-MRS acquisition series of another disc in another subject and to illustrate another mode of frame editing aspects of the present disclosure.
- FIG. 17B shows a waterfall plot in 3 -dimensions for the DDD-MRS acquisition series shown in FIG. 17A, and shows the chemical shift spectrum as a running cumulative average at discrete points over time of serial frames acquired, with spectral amplitude on the vertical axis.
- FIG. 17C shows an average DDD-MRS spectrum across the full acquisition series shown in FIGS. 17A-B, without frame editing, and plots both phase only and phase + frequency corrected formats of the spectrum.
- FIG. 17D shows a 2-dimensional time-intensity plot similar to that shown and for the same DDD-MRS acquisition series of FIG. 17A, but only reflecting retained frames after editing out other frames according to the present aspect of the disclosure and referenced to FIGS. 17A-C.
- FIG. 17E shows a similar waterfall plot of cumulative spectral averages and for the same DDD-MRS acquisition series shown in FIG. 17B, but according to only the retained frames after frame editing as shown in FIG. 17D.
- FIG. 17F shows a similar average DDD-MRS spectrum and for the same acquisition series shown in FIG. 17C, but only for the retained frames after frame editing as shown in various modes in FIGS. 17D-E.
- FIGS. 18A-B show time-intensity plots of the same MRS series acquisition for the same disc featured in FIGS. 7-8 and 11-12 as pre- (FIG. 18A) and post- (FIG. 18B) frequency correction according to a further aspect of the present disclosure, and shows each acquisition frame as a horizontal line along a horizontal frequency range with brightness indicating signal amplitude (bright white indicating higher amplitude, darker indicating lower), and shows the series of related repetitive frames in temporal relationship stacked from top to bottom, e.g. top is time zero).
- FIGS. 19A-B show the same respective time-intensity plots shown in FIG. 19A (pre-) and FIG. 19B (post-) frequency correction, but in enhanced contrast format.
- FIG. 20 shows spectral plots for 6 frame-averaged acquisition channels for the same acquisition shown in FIGS. 7-8 and 11-12, except post phase and frequency correction and prior to optimal channel selection and/or combination channel averaging.
- FIG. 21 shows a spectral plot for phase and frequency error corrected channels 1 and 2 selected from FIG. 20 as averaged, according to a further aspect of the disclosure.
- FIG. 22 shows a bar graph of mean values, with standard deviation error bars, of Visual Analog Scale (VAS) and Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) pain scores calculated for certain of the pain patients and asymptomatic volunteers evaluated in a clinical study of Example 1 and conducted using certain physical embodiments of a diagnostic system constructed according to various aspects of the present disclosure.
- VAS Visual Analog Scale
- ODI Oswestry Disability Index
- FIG. 23 shows a Receiver Operator Characteristic (ROC) curve representing the diagnostic results of the DDD-MRS diagnostic system used in the clinical study of Example 1 with human subjects featured in part in FIG. 22, as compared against standard control diagnostic measures for presumed true diagnostic results for painful vs. non- painful discs.
- ROC Receiver Operator Characteristic
- FIG. 24 shows a partition analysis plot for cross-correlation of a portion of the clinical diagnostic results of the DDD-MRS system under the same clinical study of Example 1 and also addressed in FIGS. 22-23, based on partitioning of the data at various limits attributed to different weighted factors used in the DDD-MRS diagnostic processor, with "x" data point plots for negative control discs and "o" data point plots for positive control discs, also shows certain statistical results including correlation coefficient ( R 2 ).
- FIG. 25A shows a scatter plot histogram of DDD-MRS diagnostic results for each disc evaluated in the clinical study of Example 1 and also addressed in FIGS. 22-24, and shows the DDD-MRS results separately for positive control (PC) discs (positive on provocative discography or "PD+”), negative control (NC) discs (negative on provocative discography or "PD-", plus discs from asymptomatic volunteers or "ASY”), PD- alone, and ASY alone.
- PC positive control
- NC negative control
- ASY negative on provocative discography
- ASY asymptomatic volunteers
- FIG. 25B shows a bar graph of the same DDD-MRS diagnostic results shown in FIG. 25 A across the same subject groups of Example 1, but shows the mean values with standard deviation error bars for the data.
- FIG. 26 shows a bar graph of presumed true and false binary "positive” and “negative” diagnostic results produced by the DDD-MRS system for painful and non- painful disc diagnoses in the clinical study of Example 1, as compared against standard control diagnostic measures across the positive controls, negative controls (including subgroups), and all discs evaluated in total in the study.
- FIG. 27 shows diagnostic performance measures of Sensitivity, Specificity, Positive Predictive Value (PPV), Negative Predictive Value (NPV), and area under the curve (AUC) which in this case is equivalent to Global Performance Accuracy (GPA) for the DDD-MRS diagnostic results in the clinical study of Example 1.
- PV Positive Predictive Value
- NPV Negative Predictive Value
- AUC area under the curve
- FIG. 28 shows a bar graph comparing areas under the curve (AUC) per ROC analysis of MRI alone (for prostate cancer diagnosis), MRI+ PROSE (MRS package for prostate cancer diagnosis), MRI alone (for discogenic back pain or DDD pain), and MRI + DDD-MRS (for discogenic back pain or DDD pain), with bold arrows showing relative impact of PROSE vs. DDD-MRS on AUC vs. MRI alone for the respective different applications and indications, with DDD-MRS results shown as provided under Example 1.
- AUC areas under the curve
- FIG. 29 shows positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) for MRI alone and for MRI + DDD-MRS (per Example 1 results), both as applied for diagnosing DDD pain, vs. standard control measures such as provocative discography.
- FIG. 30A shows a plot of DDD-MRS algorithm output data for a series of 8 L4-L5 lumbar discs in 8 asymptomatic human control subjects per clinically acquired and processed DDD-MRS exam under Example 1 , and plots these results twice for each disc on first (1) and second (2) separate repeat scan dates in order to demonstrate repeatability of the DDD-MRS exam's diagnostic results.
- FIG. 30A shows a plot of DDD-MRS algorithm output data for a series of 8 L4-L5 lumbar discs in 8 asymptomatic human control subjects per clinically acquired and processed DDD-MRS exam under Example 1 , and plots these results twice for each disc on first (1) and second (2) separate repeat scan dates in order to demonstrate repeatability of the DDD-MRS exam's diagnostic results.
- 30B shows a plot of PG/LAAL ratio data for 3 discs per DDD-MRS pulse sequence and signal processing data of Example 1, and shows the clinically acquired results via 3T DDD-MRS exams of the discs in vivo in pain patients (y-axis) against acquired measurements for the same chemicals in the same disc material but flash frozen after surgical removal and using 1 IT HR-MAS spectroscopy.
- FIG. 31 A shows a digitized post-processed DDD-MRS spectrum (in phase real power) as processed according to certain of the MRS signal processor aspects of the present disclosure, and certain calculated data derived therefrom as developed and used for calculated signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the processed result, as taken across a sub-set of samples evaluated under Example 1.
- SNR signal-to-noise ratio
- FIG. 3 IB shows a digitized pre-processed DDD-MRS spectrum (absorption) as 6 channel spectral average without deploying the MRS signal processing aspects of the present disclosure (e.g. "pre-processing"), and certain calculated data derived therefrom as developed and used for calculated signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the processed result.
- FIG. 31C shows a scatter plot histogram of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for standard "all channels, non-corrected" frame averaged MRS spectra (absorption) produced by the 3T MR system for a subset of discs evaluated using the DDD-MRS pulse sequence in the clinical study of Example 1 , and the SNR of MRS spectra (in phase real power) for the same series acquisitions for the same discs post-processed by the DDD-MRS signal processor configured according to various of the present aspects of this disclosure, as such SNR data was derived for example as illustrated in FIGS. 31 A-B.
- SNR signal-to-noise ratio
- FIG. 3 ID shows the same data shown in FIG. 31C, but as bar graph showing mean values and standard deviation error bars for the data within each pre- processed and post-processed groups.
- FIG. 3 IE shows a scatter plot histogram of the ratio of SNR values calculated post- versus pre- processing for each of the discs per the SNR data shown in FIGS. 31C-D.
- FIG. 3 IF shows a bar graph of mean value and standard deviation error bar of the absolute difference between post- and pre-processed SNR values for each of the discs shown in different views in FIGS. 31C-E.
- FIGS. 31G-H respectively show the mean and standard deviation for absolute improvement between pre- and post- processed SNR (FIG. 3 IF), the mean ratio improvement of post-processed/pre-processed SNR (FIG. 31G), and the mean % improvement of post-processed vs. pre-processed SNR (FIG. 31H).
- FIG. 32A shows a mid-sagittal T2-weighted MRI image of a patient evaluated under the clinical study of Example 1 and comparing the diagnostic results of the operating embodiment for DDD-MRS system developed according to various aspects herein against provocative discography results for the same discs, and shows a number-coded (and also may be color coded) diagnostic legend for the DDD-MRS results (on left of image) and discogram legend (top right on image) with overlay of the DDD-MRS results and discogram results on discs evaluated in the patient.
- FIG. 32B shows a mid-sagittal T2-weighted MRI image of another patient evaluated under the clinical study of Example 1 and comparing the diagnostic results of the physical embodiment DDD-MRS system developed according to various aspects herein against provocative discography results for the same discs, and shows a number-coded (and also may be color coded) diagnostic legend for the DDD-MRS results (on left of image) and discogram legend (top right on image) with overlay of the DDD-MRS results and discogram results on discs evaluated in the patient.
- FIG. 33 A shows a scatter plot histogram plot of DDD-MRS (or "Nociscan") diagnostic results against control groups for various discs evaluated in vivo according to the data set reviewed and processed under Example 2, as similarly shown for the data evaluated in Example 1 in FIG. 25A (plus the further addition of certain additional information further provided as overlay to the graph and related to another aspect of data analysis applied according to further aspects of the present disclosure under Example 2).
- DDD-MRS or "Nociscan”
- FIG. 33B shows another scatter plot histogram of another processed form of the DDD-MRS diagnostic results also shown in FIG. 33A and per Example 2, after transformation of the DDD-MRS diagnostic algorithm results for the discs into "% probability painful" assigned to each disc as distributed across the positive (POS) and negative (NEG) control group sub-populations shown.
- FIG. 34A shows a scatter plot histogram of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for standard "all channels, non-corrected" frame averaged MRS spectra (absorption) produced by the 3T MR system for a subset of discs evaluated using the DDD-MRS pulse sequence and signal processor in the clinical study of Example 2, and the SNR of spectra (absorption) for the same series acquisitions for the same discs post-processed by the DDD-MRS processor, as such SNR data was derived for example as illustrated in FIGS. 31A-B.
- SNR signal-to-noise ratio
- FIG. 34B shows the same data shown in FIG. 34A, but as bar graph showing mean values and standard deviation error bars for the data within each pre- processed and post-processed groups.
- FIG. 34C shows a scatter plot histogram of the ratio of SNR values calculated post- versus pre-processing for each discs per the SNR data shown in FIGS. 34A- B.
- FIG. 34D shows a bar graph of mean value and standard deviation error bar of the absolute difference between post- and pre-processed SNR values for each of the discs shown in different views in FIGS. 34A-C.
- FIG. 34E shows a bar graph of mean value and standard deviation error bar of the ratio of post- to pre-processed SNR values for each of the discs shown in different views in FIGS. 34A-D.
- FIG. 34F shows a bar graph of the mean value and standard deviation error bar for the percent increase in SNR from pre- to post-processed MRS spectra for each of the discs further featured in FIGS. 34A-E.
- FIG. 35 shows a DDD-MRS spectrum illustrative of a perceived potential lipid signal contribution as overlaps with the regions otherwise also associated with lactic acid or lactate (LA) and alanine (AL), according to further aspects of the present disclosure and as relates to Example 3.
- FIG. 36 shows a scatter plot histogram of DDD-MRS diagnostic algorithm results for the test population of in vivo discs, as calculated for a defined Group A evaluated for diagnostic purposes via Formula A, under the Example 3.
- FIGS. 37A-C show scatter plot histogram of certain embodiments for the DDD-MRS diagnostic processor for discs designated as Group B under Example 3, including as shown with respect to PG/LAAL ratio results for the discs (FIG. 17A), logistic regression generated Formula B results for the discs (FIG. 17B), and the transformed % probability pain distribution for the same Group B discs as a result of the results in FIG. 17B (FIG. 17C).
- FIG. 38 shows a scatter plot histogram of certain embodiments for DDD- MRS diagnostic processor for discs designated as Group C discs under Example 3, after applying logistic regression generated Formula C to the DDD-MRS spectral data acquired for the group of discs.
- FIG. 39 shows a scatter plot histogram of another embodiment for DDD- MRS diagnostic algorithm, as applied to Group C discs under Example 3 according to a Formula B "hybrid" illustrative of yet a further embodiment of the present disclosure.
- FIGS. 40A-B show MRI images of two lumbar spine phantoms according to another Example 4 of the disclosure.
- FIGS. 40C-D show graphical plots of n-acetyl (NAA) and lactic acid (LA) concentrations in discs from phantoms shown in FIGS. 40A-B as measured according to certain DDD-MRS aspects of the present disclosure, versus known amounts, per Example 4.
- NAA n-acetyl
- LA lactic acid
- FIGS. 41A-B show schematic flow diagrams of a DDD-MRS exam, including DDD-MRS pulse sequence, DDD-MRS signal processing, and DDD-MRS algorithm processing, and various data communication aspects, according to certain further aspects of the present disclosure.
- Magnetic resonance spectroscopy is a medical diagnostic platform that has been previously developed and characterized for a number of applications in medicine. Some of these have been approved such as for example for brain tumors, breast cancer, and prostate cancer. Some MRS platforms disclosed have been multi-voxel, and others single voxel. None of these have been adequately configured or developed for in vivo clinical application to reliably diagnose medical conditions or chemical environments associated with nociceptive pain, and/or with respect to intervertebral discs such as may be associated with disc degeneration and/or discogenic back pain (including in particular, but without limitation, with respect to the lumbar spine).
- an MRS signal processor employing multiple steps providing significant MRS signal quality enhancement, in particular with respect to improved SNR for multi-channel single voxel pulse sequence acquisitions, have yet to be sufficiently automated to provide robust utility for efficient, mainstream clinical use, such as in primary radiological imaging centers without sophisticated MR spectroscopists required to process and interpret MRS data. This is believed to be generally the case as a shortcoming for many such in vivo MRS exams in general.
- Certain aspects of the current disclosure therefore relate to new and improved system approaches, techniques, processors, and methods for conducting in vivo clinical magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) on human intervertebral discs, in particular according to a highly beneficial mode of this disclosure for using acquired MRS information to diagnose painful and/or non-painful discs associated with chronic, severe axial lumbar (or "low") back pain associated with degenerated disc disease (or "DDD pain”).
- DDD-MRS degenerated disc disease
- Various aspects of this disclosure relate to highly beneficial advances in each of three aspects, and their various combinations, useful in particular for conducting a DDD-MRS exam: (1) MRS pulse sequence for generating and acquiring robust MRS spectra; (2) signal processor configured to improve signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the acquired MRS spectra; and (3) diagnostic processor configured to use information from the acquired and processed MRS spectra for diagnosing painful and/or non-painful discs on which the MRS exam is conducted in a DDD pain patient.
- SNR signal-to-noise ratio
- a DDD-MRS sequence exam is conducted according to one example overview description as follows.
- a single three dimensional "voxel,” typically a rectangular volume, is prescribed by an operator at a control consul, using 3 imaging planes (mid- sagittal, coronal, axial) to define the "region of interest” (ROI) in the patient's body, such as shown in FIGS. 1A-C, for MR excitation by the magnet and data acquisition by the acquisition channel/coils designated for the lumbar spine exam within the spine detector coil assembly.
- the DDD-MRS pulse sequence applies a pulsing magnetic and radiofrequency to the ROI, which causes single proton combinations in various chemicals within the ROI to resonate at different "signature resonant frequencies" across a range.
- the amplitudes of frequencies at various locations along this range are plotted along a curve as the MRS "spectrum" for the ROI. This is done iteratively across multiple acquisitions for a given ROI, typically representing over 50 acquisitions, often 100 or more acquisitions, and often between about 200 and about 600 acquisitions, such as between 300 and 400 acquisitions for a given exam of a ROI.
- One acquisition spectrum among these iterations is called a "frame" for purpose of this disclosure, though other terms may be used as would be apparent to one of ordinary skill.
- These multiple acquisitions are conducted in order to average their respective acquired spectra/frames to reduce the amplitudes of acquired signal components representing noise (typically more random or “incoherent” and thus reduced by averaging) while better maintaining the amplitudes of signal components representing target resonant chemical frequencies of diagnostic interest in the ROI (typically repeatable and more "coherent” and thus not reduced by averaging).
- this multiple serial frame averaging process is thus conducted for the primary objective to increase SNR.
- These acquisitions are also conducted at various acquisition channels selected at the detector coils, such as for example 6 channels corresponding with the lumbar spine area of the coil assembly used in the Examples (where for example 2 coils may be combined for each channel).
- the 3T MRI Signa system (“Signa” or “3T Signa”), in standard operation conducting one beneficial mode of DDD-MRS sequence evaluated (e.g. Examples provided herein), is believed to be configured to average all acquired frames across all acquisition channels to produce a single averaged MRS curve for the ROI.
- This unmodified approach has been observed, including according to the various Figures and Examples provided herein, to provide a relatively low signal/noise ratio, with low confidence in many results regarding data extraction at spectral regions of diagnostic interest, such as for example and in particular regions associated with proteoglycan or "PG" (n-acetyl) and lactate or lactic acid (LA).
- PG proteoglycan
- LA lactate or lactic acid
- Sources of potential error and noise inherent in this imbedded signal acquisition and processing configuration of the typical MR system were observed in conducting the DDD-MRS pulse sequence such as according to the Examples.
- These various sources of potential error or signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) compromise were determined to be mostly correctable - either by altering certain structures or protocols of coil, sequence, or data acquisition, or in post-processing of otherwise standard protocols and structures used.
- SNR signal-to-noise ratio
- various post-acquisition signal processing approaches were developed and observed to produce significantly improved and highly favorable results using otherwise un-modified operation pre-processing.
- various improvements developed and applied under the current post-signal processor disclosed herein have been observed to significantly improve signal quality and SNR.
- Certain such improvements advanced under the post-signal processor configurations disclosed herein include embodiments related to the following: (1) acquisition channel selection; (2) phase error correction; (3) frequency error correction; (4) frame editing; and (5) apodization. These modules or steps are typically followed by channel averaging to produce one resulting "processed" MRS spectrum, when multiple channels are retained throughout the processing (though often only one channel may be retained). These may also be conducted in various different respective orders, though as is elsewhere further developed frame editing will typically precede frequency error correction. For illustration, one particular order of these operations employed for producing the results illustrated in the Examples disclosed herein are provided as follows: (1) acquisition channel selection; (2) phase correction; (3) apodization; (4) frame editing; (5) frequency correction; and (6) averaging.
- a typical DDD-MRS exam according to the present embodiments will be conducted in an MR scanner in which the patient lies still in a supine position with a spine detector coil underneath the patient's back and including the lower spine. While this scanner applies the magnetic and RF fields to the subject, the spine detector coil functions as an antenna to acquire signals from resonating molecules in the body.
- the primary source of MRS signals obtained from a Signa 3T MR scanner according to the physical embodiments developed and evaluated in the Examples herein this disclosure, are from the GE HD CTL 456 Spine Coil. This is a "receive-only" coil with sixteen coils configured into eight channels. Each channel contains a loop and saddle coil, and the channels are paired into sections. For lumbar (and thoracic) spine coverage, such as associated with lumbar DDD pain diagnosis, sections 4, 5, and 6 are typically deployed to provide six individual channel signals, as shown for example in FIG. 2.
- Certain embodiments of this disclosure relates principally to "single voxel" MRS, where a single three dimensional region of interest (ROI) is defined as a "voxel" (VOlumetric piXEL) for MRS excitation and data acquisition.
- the spectroscopic voxel is selected based on T2 -weighted high-resolution spine images acquired in the sagittal, coronal, and axial planes, as shown for example in FIGS. 1A-C.
- the patient is placed into the scanner in a supine position, head first.
- the axial spine images acquired are often in a plane oriented with disc angle (e.g. may be oblique) in order to better encompass the disc of interest.
- This voxel is prescribed within a disc nucleus for purpose of using acquired MRS spectral data to diagnose DDD pain, according to the present preferred embodiments.
- the objective for voxel prescription is to capture as much of the nuclear volume as possible (e.g. maximizing magnitude of relevant chemical signals acquired), while restricting the voxel borders from capturing therewithin structures of the outer annulus or bordering vertebral body end-plates (the latter being a more significant consideration, where lipid contribution may be captured and may shroud chemical spectral regions of interest such as lactate or alanine, as further developed elsewhere herein).
- L5-S1 may be particularly challenging because in some patients it can frequently be highly angulated, irregularly shaped, and collapsed as to disc height.
- the thickness is limited by the scanner's ability to generate the magnetic gradient that defines the Z-axis (axial plane) dimension.
- a minimum thickness limit is pre-set to 4mm on the GE Signa 3T. While such preset limits of interfacing, cooperative equipment and related software may result in limits on the current application's ability to function in that environment outside of these limits, the broad aspects of the current disclosure should not be considered necessarily so limited in all cases, and functionality may flourish within other operating ranges perhaps than those specifically indicated as examples herein, such as in cases where such other imparted limitations may be released.
- typical voxel dimensions and volumes may be for example 5mm (thick) by 14mm (width) by 16mm (length), and 1.12cc, though one may vary any or all of these dimensions by operator prescription to suit a particular anatomy or intended application.
- the Z-axis dimension is typically limited maximally by disc height (in order to exclude the end- plates, described further herein), and minimally by either the set minimum limitations of the particular MR scanner and/or per SAR safety considerations, in many disc applications (such as specific indication for pain diagnosis or other assessment of disc chemistry described herein).
- This Z-axis dimension will typically be about 3mm to about 6 mm (thick), more typically between about 4mm to about 6mm, and most typically will be suitable (and may be required to be, per anatomy) between about 4mm to about 5mm.
- the other dimensions are typically larger across the disc's plane, and may be for example between about 15mm to about 20mm (width and/or length), as have been observed suitable ranges for most observed cases (e.g. per the Examples herein). While the higher dimension of these ranges is typically limited only by bordering tissues desirable to exclude, the opportunity for patient motion to alter the relative location of the target voxel relative to actual anatomy may dictate some degree of "spacing" from such bordering structures to ensure exclusion.
- voxels within discs will generally provide robust results, at least with respect to signal quality, at volumes of at least about .5cc, and in many cases at least about .75cc or lcc. This typically will be limited by bordering anatomy to up to about 2ccs, or in some less typical cases up to about 3ccs for exceptionally large discs. These voxel volume ranges will typically be achieved with various combinations of the typical axis dimensions as also stated above.
- an initial prescription may not be appropriate for achieving acceptable results, though this may not be known until a sequence is begun to allow observation of acquired signal quality.
- a voxel prescription protocol which prescribes a first prescription, monitors results (either during scan or after completion, or via a "pre-scan" routine for this purpose), and if a lipid signature or other suspected signal degradation from expected results is observed, re-prescribe the voxel to avoid suspected source of contaminant (e.g.
- a pre-set protocol for re-prescribing in such circumstances may define when to accept the result vs. continue re-trying.
- the voxel may be re-prescribed and acquisition series re-run once, or perhaps twice, and then the best result is to be accepted. It is to be appreciated, as with many technology platforms, that operator training and techniques in performing such user- dependent operations may be relevant to results, and optimal (or conversely sub-optimal) results may track skill levels and techniques used.
- FIG. 1A shows a coronal view oriented aspect of the voxel prescription.
- Fig. IB shows a sagittal view oriented aspect of the voxel prescription.
- Fig. 1C shows an axial view oriented aspect of the voxel prescription.
- the DDD-MRS pulse sequence shares certain similarities, though with certain differences and modifications defined herein, with another MRS pulse sequence called "PROSE".
- PROSE is primarily intended for use for diagnosing prostate cancer, and is approved for use and sale and available from GE on 1.5T GE MR systems.
- RF radio frequency
- CSI chemical shift imaging
- the 3D phase encoding option available under PROSE is not an approach typically to be utilized under the current disclosed version of DDD-MRS sequence, and single voxel spectra are acquired by this version embodiment of DDD-MRS pulse sequence.
- This unique relative configuration for the DDD-MRS pulse sequence can be accomplished by setting the user control variables (CVs) for the matrix acquisition size of each axis to 1 (e.g., in the event the option for other setting is made available). Further aspects of pulse sequence approaches contemplated are disclosed elsewhere herein. It is to be appreciated that while the modified PRESS approach herein described is particularly beneficial, other approaches may be taken for the pulse sequence according to one of ordinary skill consistent with other aspects and objectives herein described and without departing from the broad aspects of intended scope herein.
- PROBE also commercially available from GE, and which is a CSI sequence used for brain spectroscopy
- the lipid/fat signals are believed to be resolved through the use of long TE (144ms) periods and 2 dimensional transformations (2DJ).
- 2DJ 2 dimensional transformations
- These acquisition and signal processing techniques are believed to be facilitated by the large voxel volumes prescribed in the brain as well as the homogeneity of the brain tissue resulting in relatively narrow spectral line widths.
- the voxel prescriptions are much smaller and it is often impossible to place the voxel so as to assuredly exclude tissues that contain lipid/fat.
- Water suppression is also provided by a CHESS sequence interleaved or otherwise combined in some manner with the PRESS sequence in order to provide appropriate results. Optimization of the residual water spectral line for frequency correction is done, according to one highly beneficial further aspect of the present disclosure, with the setting prescribed for the third flip angle. The angle is lowered to reduce the water suppression function which increases the residual water spectral line amplitude. Conversely higher relative third flip angles will increase water suppression for reduced water signal in an acquired MRS spectrum.
- a particular flip angle for this purpose may be for example about 125, though may be according to other examples between about 45 degrees and about 125 degrees (or as much as about 145 degrees). Accordingly, in one aspect, the flip angle may be for example at least about 45 degrees.
- the flip angle may be up to 125 degrees or even up to 145 degrees.
- an expanded experimental data set of 79 discs in 42 subjects represented under Example 3 included robust, reliable results across this population with an average flip angle of about 120 or 121 degrees +/- about 33 degrees.
- a later component of that population conducted with further refinements revealed a majority of cases suitable at a flip angle between about 65 degrees and about 125 degrees, and in fact with most found to be sufficient at about 85 degrees. It is to be appreciated that despite these specific number and range examples, and robust results observed therefrom, it is also believed that flip angles within about 5 or 10 degrees apart are likely to produce substantially similar results for purposes intended herein.
- This flip angle aspect of the present disclosure is another example where some degree of customization may be required, in order to optimize water signal for a given disc, in a given particular MR system. As some discs may be more dehydrated or conversely more hydrated than others, the water suppression may be more appropriate at one level for one disc, and at another level for another disc. This may require some iterative setting and acquisition protocol to optimize, whereas the angle example described herein is considered appropriate for most circumstances and may be a pre-defined starting place for "first try.”
- FIG. 3A shows an example of a CHESS water suppression pulse sequence diagram
- FIG. 3B shows an example of a combined CHESS - PRESS pulse sequence diagram
- the volume excitation achieved using PRESS takes advantage of three orthogonal slices in the form of a double spin echo to select a specific region of interest.
- the range of chemical shift frequencies (over 400 Hz for proton at 3.0T) is not insignificant relative to the limited band width of most excitation pulses (1000-2000 Hz).
- the result can be a misregistration of the volume of interest for chemical shift frequencies not at the transmitter frequency.
- the chemical levels may be not only dependent on tissue level, Tl and T2, but also dependent on location within the volume of interest.
- due to imperfections in the RF pulse out of volume excitation may occur which can present signals from chemicals that are not in the frequency/location range of interest.
- VSS very selective saturation
- the DDD-MRS sequence according to this mode uses the VSS bands to define the actual DDD-MRS volume. It is believed that up to about six additional VSS bands may be prescribed (each consisting of three VSS RF pulses) graphically in PROSE, with the goal of reducing the chemical shift error that can occur within the voxel as well as suppress excitation of out of voxel tissue during the PRESS localization of the voxel. According to some observations in applying DDD-MRS to disc spectroscopy, these additional graphic VSS pulses were found to not significantly improve the volume selection. In other observations, some benefit is suspected to have resulted. Accordingly, while they may provide benefit in certain circumstances, they also may not be necessary or even desired to be used in others.
- FIG. 3C shows a schematic diagram of certain aspects of a combined CHESS - VSS- PRESS pulse sequence diagram also consistent with certain aspects of the present disclosure.
- multiple VSS bands are placed around the voxel prescription in each plane to reduce out of voxel excitation and chemical shift error present during the PRESS localization of the voxel.
- the echo time (TE) of about 130 ms is believed to be the default selection typically used for PROSE data acquisitions. This echo time is typically considered too long for DDD-MRS pulse sequence applications for acquiring robust disc spectra due to the small voxel volume and shorter T 2 relaxation times of the chemical constituents of lumbar intervertebral discs, leading to a dramatic decrease in signal to noise in long echo PRESS spectra.
- a shorter echo time setting for the scanner such as for example about 28 milliseconds, is generally considered more appropriate and beneficial for use in the current DDD-MRS sequence and DDD pain application (though this may be varied as would be apparent to one of ordinary skill based upon review of this total disclosure and to suit a particular situation).
- a frame repetition time (TR) of for example about 1000 ms provides sufficient relaxation of the magnetic dipoles in the ROI and leads to reasonable acquisition times and is believed to represent a beneficial compromise between short acquisition times and signal saturation at shorter values of TR (though this may also be varied, as also elsewhere herein described).
- first, second, and third flip angles of PRESS for the current DDD-MRS sequence embodiment may be for example 90, 167, and 167, respectively (though these may slightly vary, and user-defined settings may not always reflect actual angle - for example the latter two values may be exchanged with or represent one example of an actual result of a 180 degree setting).
- CVs may comprise modifications from similar settings that may be provided for another CHESS-PRESS or CHESS-VSS-PRESS pulse sequence, such as for example PROSE, either as defaults or as user defined settings for a particular other application than as featured in the various aspects herein this disclosure.
- These CV settings in context of use as modifications generally to a sequence otherwise sharing significant similarities to PROSE, are believed to result in a highly beneficial resulting DDD-MRS sequence for the intended purpose of later signal processing, according to the DDD-MRS signal processor embodiments herein described, and performing a diagnosis of DDD pain in discs examined (the latter according for example to the DDD-MRS diagnostic processor aspects and embodiments also herein disclosed).
- these specific settings may be modified by one of ordinary skill and still provide highly beneficial results, and are also contemplated within the broad intended scope of the various aspects of this present disclosure.
- the signal detected in the MR spectrometer in the receiving "detector" coil assembly, after exposing a sample to a radio frequency pulse, is called the Free Induction Decay (FID) for purpose of this disclosure.
- the MR signal is typically detected using quadrature detection.
- the acquired MR signal is composed of two parts, often referred as real and imaginary parts of the FID.
- FIG. 5 shows the real (Sx) and imaginary (Sy) parts of an FID (right) that correspond to x and y components of the rotating magnetic moment M (left).
- FIDs are generated at the period defined by TR.
- TR a TR of about 1000 milliseconds, according to the example embodiment described above, equals a rate of about 1 Hz (about one FID per second).
- the FID signal received from each coil channel is digitized by the scanner to generate a 1024 point complex number data set or acquisition frame.
- An MRS scan session consists of a number of frames of unsuppressed water FIDs (such as for example may be about 16 frames) and up to 368 or more (as may be defined by an operator or setting in the pulse sequence) frames of suppressed water FIDs, which together are considered an acquisition series.
- the unsuppressed water FIDs provide a strong water signal that is used by the signal processing to determine which coils to use in the signal processing scheme as well as the phase information from each coil (and in certain embodiments may also be used for frequency error correction).
- these high water content unsuppressed frames do not typically provide appropriate resolution in the target biomarker regions of the associated spectra to use them for diagnostic data purposes.
- the suppressed water FIDs are processed by the DDD-MRS processor to obtain this spectral information, although the unsuppressed frames may be used for certain processing approaches taken by the processor.
- FIG. 6 shows a plot of all the FIDs obtained in a DDD-MRS pulse sequence scan according to certain present illustrative embodiments, and is an amplitude plot of complex data from a standard DDD-MRS acquisition with the y-axis representing the magnitude of FID data and the x-axis representing serial frame count over time.
- the MR scanner generates the FIDs using the defined sequences to energize the volume of interest (VOI), digitizes them according to the defined data acquisition parameters, and stores the data, typically as floating point numbers. While this data may be packaged, e.g. in "archive file,” and communicated in various formats and methods, one example is provided here.
- a data descriptor header file (DDF) with all the aforementioned parameters along with voxel prescription data is appended to the data to generate the archive file.
- DDF data descriptor header file
- Examples of certain parameters provided in a DDF are as follows :studyID (String); seriesNum (Integer for assigned Series Number); studyDate(String date code); seriesDesc (String for series description); roofName (String); nSamps (Integer for number of complex samples, typically 1024); nFrames (Integer for number of frames or reps); coilName (String); pulseSeqName (String); Te (Float, echo time, in ms); Tr (Float, repetition time, in ms); TxFreq (Float, in MHz); nSatBands (Integer, number of saturation bands); voxTilt (Float, voxel tilt about x-axis, in degrees); vox Vol (Float, Voxel volume in cc); voxX (Float, Voxel X dimension, in mm); voxY (Float, Voxel Y dimension, in mm
- the archive file may then be transferred to another computer running an application written in a language, such as for example Matlab® R2009a (e.g. with "Image Processing Toolbox” option, such as to generate time-intensity plots such as shown in various Figures herein), which opens the archive file.
- the Matlab application may be user- configurable, or may be configured as full or partial executables, and is configured to signal process the acquired and transferred DDD-MRS information contained in the archive file, such as according to the various signal processing embodiments herein.
- Other software packages, such as "C,” “C+,” or “C++” may be suitably employed for similar purposes.
- the DDD-MRS signal processor parses information pertinent to the signal processing of the data from the data description header, and imports the FID data acquired at each detector coil for subsequent signal processing.
- the DDD-MRS signal processor can be implemented in a variety of manners, such as using computer hardware, firmware, or software, or some combination thereof.
- the DDD-MRS signal processor can comprise a computer processor configured to execute a software application as computer-executable code stored in a non- transitory computer-readable medium.
- the computer processor can be part of a general purpose computer.
- the DDD-MRS signal processor can be implemented using specialized computer hardware such as integrated circuits instead of computer software.
- DDD-MRS signal processor as well as other components described herein that may be implemented by a computer, can be implemented by multiple computers connected, for example, by a network or the internet.
- algorithms, processes, sequences, calculations, and tasks, etc. described herein can be divided into portions to be performed by multiple computer processors or other hardware located on multiple physically distinct computers.
- some tasks that are described herein as being performed by distinct computers or systems may be performed by a single computer or a single integrated system.
- the archive file and related MRS data may be communicated via a number of available networks or methods to external source for receipt, processing, or other form of use.
- the information is communicated via picture archiving and communication system (PACS) that has become ubiquitous for storing and communicating radiologic imaging information.
- PACS picture archiving and communication system
- accompanying MRI images may also be stored and communicated therewith, e.g. in standardized "digital imaging and communications in medicine" or "DICOM" format.
- the data transfer described may be to a local computer processor for processing, or more remotely such as via the web (typically in secure format).
- a local computer processor for processing, or more remotely such as via the web (typically in secure format).
- all or a portion of the various aspects of the present embodiments may be installed or otherwise integrated within the MR system itself, e.g. a computer based controller or processor embedded therewithin or otherwise connected thereto, for operation prior to packaging results for output (and any remaining portions might be performed peripherally or more remotely).
- the MR scanner system Upon the acquisition of all MRS data from a DDD-MRS pulse sequence exam, according to certain aspects of the present embodiments, the MR scanner system will typically provide the operator with a spectral image that is the averaged combination of all frames across all the 6 detection channels (coils).
- a spectral image that is the averaged combination of all frames across all the 6 detection channels (coils).
- FIG. 7 shows a typical scanner-processed spectral signal plot of combined, averaged channels.
- FIG. 8 shows the magnitude only (no correction) MRS spectral images of each of the six channels which are aggregated to form the output from the example MR system as shown in FIG. 7, and thus this raw uncorrected individual channel spectral data output provides the input to the DDD-MRS signal processor of the present embodiments.
- the DDD-MRS signal processor is configured to conduct a series of operations in temporal fashion as described herein, and as shown according to the present detailed embodiments in the flow charts illustrated in general to increasing detail for the various component modes and operable steps in FIGS. 9A-C. More specifically, FIG. 9A shows a general schematic overview for the flow of a diagnostic system 2 that includes a signal processor 4 and a diagnostic processor 6.
- Signal processor includes various sub-components and processors that carry out certain steps, such as a channel selector that conducts channel or "coil" selection step 10, phase corrector that does phase correction step 20, apodizer that conducts apodizer step 30, domain transformer that conducts the domain transform step 44 such as from time domain to frequency domain, frame editor that conducts frame editing steps 50, frequency corrector that conducts frequency correction steps 60, and channel combiner that conducts combining or averaging steps 70 to aggregate retained channels into one final post-processed spectral results (not shown).
- a diagnostic processor conducts diagnostic processing of the signal processed signals through data extraction steps 110, diagnostic algorithm application steps 120, and patient or diagnostic report generation 130. While this configuration is considered highly beneficial, these same or similar tasks may be performed in different order, as would be apparent to one of ordinary skill.
- FIGS 9B-C show further details regarding some of these specific steps, and also illustrate a different order than has been shown and referenced to FIG. 9A. More specifically, the signal processor 4 in shown to include the main primary steps shown in FIG. 9A, but in finer detail and different order. It some embodiments, the steps shown in FIGS. 9A-C may be performed in an order different than those shown in FIGS. 9A-C. Also, in some embodiments, steps that are shown in FIGS. 9A-C can be omitted, combined with other steps, or divided into additional sub-steps. Additionally, in some cases, additional steps not specifically shown in FIGS. 9A-C can be performed in addition to the steps shown in FIGS. 9A-C.
- Channel selection includes the following steps: signal power measurement step 11 measures signal power for SNR calculation, as shown here in the specific embodiment in first 100 points of FID with unsuppressed water. Noise power measurement step 13 measures noise in the last 100 points, for example, of the FID with unsuppressed frames. SNR estimate 15 is then conducted, at which point thereafter channel selection step 17 is conducted per the channel with the maximum or highest signal. Channel selection includes an additional step 18 where additional channels are selected if within range of the strongest, e.g. about 3dB. Upon completing channel selection, an index of selected channels is generated (step 19).
- Frame editing operation 50 is also shown, with transformation of unsuppressed water frame to frequency domain 51, locate water peak in +/- 40Hz per peak location step 53, frame confidence level calculation 55, frame frequency error and store 57, and actual frame selection step 59 based upon minimum confidence level threshold (e.g. .8)
- Apodization 30 includes for each selected channel and each frame indexed for frequency correction 31 , then apply 250 point boxcar function to the FID (step 33).
- frequency correction 60 entails for each selected channel and each frame indexed for frequency correction and apodization 61, transform 63 the frame (FID) to the frequency of domain, and locate the frequency error 65 for the frame as identified during frame editing.
- the spectrum is shifted 67 by the frequency error value to frequency correct the spectrum.
- Step 69 adds frequency corrected spectrum to many to spectral average for all selected channels.
- data extraction 110 involves opening 111 the acquisition spectral average lot generated in frequency correction, scan step 113 of spectral plot for metabolite features and apply to bins, and record data bins to acquisition metabolite 115.
- the diagnostic algorithm 120 itself involves opening the acquisition metabolite file extracted from spectral average 121, extract 123 metabolite features required by diagnostic linear regression equations, and generate 125 acquisition diagnostic score and store to file.
- Report generation 130 includes open acquisition diagnostic score fill 131, open DICOM file 133 for Patient ID associated with acquisition diagnostic score, extract 135 sagittal image from the DICOM report, apply 137 acquisition score to sagittal image for each scanned disc, and return sagittal image to DICOM report 139.
- a first operation of the DDD- MRS processor assesses the SNR of each channel. This is done to determine which channels have acquired sufficiently robust signal to use for data processing and averaging. The result may produce one single channel that is further processed, or multiple channels that are later used in combination under multi-channel averaging. In the majority of acquired signals observed according to the Examples disclosed herein, only a subset of the 6 lumbar acquisition channels were determined to be sufficiently robust for use. However, the standard system output averages all 6 channels. Accordingly, this filtering process alone - removing poor signal channels and working with only stronger signal channels - has been observed to dramatically improve processed spectra for diagnostic use in some cases.
- the SNR is calculated by obtaining the average power in the first 100 data points (the signal) and the last 100 points (the noise) of the unsuppressed water FID.
- the unsuppressed water FIDs signals are used because of the strong water signal.
- the channel with the greatest SNR, and channels within a predetermined threshold variance of that strongest one, e.g. within about 3 dB for example, are preserved for further processing and as candidates for multi-channel averaging - other channels falling below this range are removed from further processing (though may be used for further processing, yet removed from final results).
- the water suppression should leave enough residual water signal to use as a reference to reliably perform frame-by-frame frequency correction but not so much that water signal artifacts affect the chemical shift spectrum in the metabolite areas of interest.
- Such artifacts include simple spectral leakage as well as phase modulation sidebands due to gradient vibration induced B 0 modulation.
- a second operation conducted by the DDD-MRS processor is phase alignment, or phase error correction. This is performed to support coherent summation of the signals from the selected channels and the extraction of the absorption spectra. This is often necessary, or at least helpful, because in many cases a systemic phase bias is present in the different channels.
- This systemic phase bias is best estimated by analysis of the data frames (e.g. about 16 frames in the DDD-MRS pulse sequence of the current illustrative detailed embodiments) collected at the beginning of each scan without water suppression. This operation, according to one mode for example, analyzes the phase sequence of the complex samples and fits a polynomial to that sequence.
- a first-order (linear) fit is used in one further illustrative embodiment. This is believed to provide a better estimate of the offset than simply using the phase of the first sample, as is often done. This is because eddy current artifacts, if present, will be most prominent in the first part of the frame.
- the offset of the linear fit is the initial phase. Observation has indicated that the first 150 samples (75 mS at the typical 2000 samples-per-second rate) typically provide reliable phase data.
- the fit is performed on each of the water-unsuppressed frames for each channel and the mean phase of these is used to phase adjust the data for the corresponding channel. This is accomplished by performing a phase rotation of every complex sample in each frame to compensate for the phase offset as estimated above, setting the initial phase to zero.
- the offset of the linear fit is the phase bias with respect to zero and the slope is the frequency error with respect to perfect center-tuning on the water signal. Only the offset portion of the curve fit is used to phase correct the data.
- An illustrative example of this is shown in schematic form in FIG. 10, which shows phase angle before and after phase correction.
- the phase angle signal is shown as the dotted line.
- the solid line is the least squares fit estimate.
- the dashed line is the phase and frequency corrected signal, though the offset component is used to phase correct and frequency correction is performed subsequently in the temporal process according to the present DDD-MRS processor embodiment.
- FIG. 11 The real-part squared MRS spectral results of phase correction for each of all the six channels shown prior to correction in FIG. 8 is shown in FIG. 11, with channels 1- 3 indicated from left to right at the top, and channels 4-6 indicated from left to right at the bottom of the figure.
- the averaged spectrum of the selected, phase corrected channels (channels 1 and 2) is shown in FIG. 12, which reflects significant SNR improvement versus the uncorrected all channel average spectrum shown in FIG. 7.
- a further mode of the present DDD-MRS processor embodiment utilizes a frame editor to conduct frame editing to identify those frames which vary sufficiently from the expected or otherwise observed acquisition results such that they should be excluded, as is also represented schematically in the flow diagram examples of FIGS. 9A-B.
- certain patient motions during an acquisition may result in signal drop-out as well as frequency shifts (e.g. magnetic susceptibility artifact).
- frequency shifts e.g. magnetic susceptibility artifact
- involuntary motion e.g. respiration
- these are typically sufficiently minor and within a range that they are not believed to implicate signal quality other than the shift itself (which can be significant source of SNR degradation, but correctable per the present disclosure).
- the DDD-MRS processor analyzes the residual water signal in each frame to determine if it is of sufficient quality to support frequency correction.
- FIG. 13 shows a time-intensity plot which illustrates a scan series with frequency shifts and "drop outs" with SNR changes considered to represent corrupted frames due to patient motion. More specifically, this shows 1 dimensional horizontal lines for each frame, with signal amplitude reflected in "brightness” or intensity (e.g. higher values are whiter, lower are darker), with time across the serial acquisition of the series progressing top to bottom vertically in the Figure. A vertical band of brightness is revealed to the left side of the plot. However, in this particular example, there is a clear break in this band as “drop out” frames. After excluding the "drop out” frames (center of time sequence between about 75 and 175 MRS frames, it was still possible to obtain a high quality final averaged spectrum from this scan using the remaining robust frames, as further developed immediately below.
- FIGS. 14A and 14B show the confidence level estimate and the frame by frame frequency error estimate, respectively, which are used according to the present embodiment for frame editing according to this acquisition series example of FIG. 13. More specifically, FIG. 14A shows the frame by frame confidence level, with confidence level on the Y-axis, and the sequential series of frame acquisitions along a scan indicated along the X- axis. FIG. 14B shows the actual frequency error along the Y-axis, for the same frame series along the X-axis. This is based on analyzing the characteristics of the residual water peak and the noise in a band 80 Hz wide (for 3T processing, the band would be 40 Hz wide at 1.5T) around the center-tuned frequency.
- the largest peak is assumed to be the water signal and the assumption is qualified by the confidence estimate.
- the confidence value is above a threshold, i.e. 0.8, the frame is flagged as a candidate for frequency correction and thus "retained.”
- the final qualification step per this example, is to determine if there are enough qualified candidate frames to achieve sufficient SNR improvement when averaged.
- This threshold limit for proceeding with frequency correction has been empirically established as 90 frames meeting the criteria. According to the present embodiments, this has been observed to provide sufficiently robust results per the Examples described herein.
- the number of frames required will be based upon the SNR levels achievable from the completed signal processing. This will be paced by SNR of input signal acquisitions to begin with, and performance of other signal processing modes and steps taken with those signals. According to the acquisitions under the Examples disclosed herein, SNR is believed to increase over about 150 frames, and then with little gained typically thereafter, though the 90 frame minimum limit has been observed to provide sufficient results when reached (in rare circumstances). In the event the result drops below the 90 frame limit, the DDD-MRS processor is still configured to proceed with other modes of signal processing, signal quality evaluation, and then diagnostic processor may be still employed - just without the added benefit of the frame editing and frequency error correction.
- the discrete amplitude spectrum can be analyzed in the range of the center-tuned frequency ⁇ 40 Hz for example in the case of a 3T system acquisition, and half this bounded range (e.g. ⁇ 20 Hz) for a 1.5T system acquisition.
- the highest peak is located to determine it's width at the half-amplitude point.
- the total spectral width of all parts of the spectrum which exceed the half-amplitude point of the highest peak are determined.
- the confidence estimate is formed by taking the ratio of the spectral width of the greatest peak divided by the total spectral width which exceeds the threshold.
- the confidence estimate will be 1.0, if there are many other peaks or spectral components which could be confused with the greatest one, then the estimate will approach 0.0.
- This provides a simple and robust estimate of the randomness or dispersal of energy in the vicinity of the water peak.
- this current approach provides at least one desirable characteristic in that it's performance is substantially invariant with amplitude.
- p probability
- i frequency index value (e.g. -40 to +40 hz).
- 16B shows a similar phase and frequency error corrected spectrum averaged for the same selected channels 3 and 4, but for only 143 of the 256 acquired frames aggregated/averaged per channel (the remaining 113 frames edited out), per frame editing applied according to the present embodiments prior to frequency error correction.
- the peak value in the combined lactate-alanine (LAAL) region of the frame edited spectrum of FIG. 16B is significantly increased - with corresponding increase in SNR - relative to the peak value in the same LAAL region of the non- frame edited spectrum in FIG. 16A (e.g. the peak value increases from about 3.75 x 10 8 to about 4.4 x 10 8 ), a nearly 20% SNR increase despite about 40% corresponding reduction in the number of FID frames used.
- LAAL lactate-alanine
- FIGS. 13-16B address a highly beneficial embodiment for frame editing based upon water signal
- other frame editing embodiments are also contemplated, and many different features of acquired DDD-MRS signals may be used for this purpose.
- One such further embodiment is shown for example by reference' to another DDD-MRS pulse sequence acquisition for another disc in another subject by reference to FIGS. 17A-F. More specifically, per the time-intensity plot shown for this acquisition in FIG. 17 A, while the water signal region of the acquired spectral series (bright vertical band on left side of plot) reveals some shift artifact, another bright band appears at a broader region on the right side of the spectra, between about 150 and 200 FID frames into the exam.
- This region is associated with lipid, and also overlaps with lactic acid (LA) and alanine (AL) regions of diagnostic interest according to the present detailed embodiments and Examples.
- LA lactic acid
- AL alanine
- FIG. 17B shows a waterfall plot of running cumulative average of acquired frames in series, where signal amplitude rises in this lipid-related spectral region during this portion of the exam.
- a resulting average spectral plot for channels 1 and 2 of this acquisition, post phase and frequency correction is shown for reference in FIG. 17C.
- This resulting spectrum has significant signal peak intensity and line width commensurate with lipid signal, and which shrouds an ability to assess underlying LA and/or AL chemicals overlapping therewith in their respective regions.
- an ability to measure LA and AL being compromised may also compromise an ability to make a diagnostic assessment of tissue based upon these chemicals (as if un compromised by overlapping lipid).
- an ability to edit it out to assess signal without that portion of the exam may provide a robust result for LA and AL-based evaluation nonetheless.
- FIGS. 17D-F This is shown in FIGS. 17D-F where only the first 150 frames of the same acquisition are evaluated, which occur prior to the lipid contribution arising in the acquired signals. As is shown here, no lipid signal is revealed in the time intensity plot of FIG. 17D, or waterfall plot of FIG. 17E, or resulting final spectrum of FIG. 17F, though strong proteoglycan peak is shown with very little (if any) LA or AL in the signal of otherwise high SNR (e.g. per the PG peak).
- lipid editor may also be employed as a further embodiment for frame editing, with approaches for recognizing lipid signal taken as elsewhere herein described (or as may be otherwise available to one of ordinary skill and appropriately applicable to this applied use).
- the DDD-MRS processor comprises a frequency error corrector that performs frequency correction, such as for example prior to averaging frames, as also represented schematically in the flow diagrams of FIGS. 9A-B.
- the frame editing can be performed distinct from the frequency correction process (e.g., performed beforehand), or the frame editing and frequency correction can be performed simultaneously.
- the DDD-MRS processor can attempt to identify the water peak, calculate a level of confidence that the identified peak is water. If the confidence level is below a threshold, the frame can be disregarded. If the confidence level is above a threshold, the water peak, as well as the rest of the spectrum, can be shifted to its proper alignment. The DDD-MRS processor can then proceed to the next frame in the sequence.
- Frequency error can be visualized using a time-intensity plot of the absorption spectra of all the frames in an acquisition cycle.
- An example process and related results of frequency error correction according to this present embodiment is shown and described by reference to FIGS. 18A-21 for the same DDD-MRS series acquisition featured in FIGS. 7-8 (prior to any correction) and FIGS. 11-12 (per prior DDD-MRS signal processing step of phase error correction).
- FIGS.18A-19B and similarly for prior FIGS. 13 and 17 A
- each acquisition frame is represented by a horizontal line, with amplitude of signal intensity across the frequency spectrum indicated by brightness in grey scale (brighter shade/white designates higher amplitude, darker signal intensity indicates lower relative amplitude).
- the horizontal lines representing individual acquisition frames are displayed in vertically "stacked" arrangement that follows their temporal sequence as acquired, e.g. time zero is in the upper left corner and frequency incremented from left to right.
- the top 16 lines represent unsuppressed water frames, with the remainder below representing suppressed water acquisitions.
- the brightest portion of each line (left side of the time-intensity plots) is reliably recognized as the water peak absorption, typically the strongest signal of acquired MRS spectra in body tissues.
- this plot for the original acquired sequence of frames from an acquisition series intended to be averaged is shown pre-frequency correction (e.g. with original frequency locations), and similar view but post-frequency correction is shown in FIG. 18B.
- Shifting of the location of this bright white water peak region, as observed between vertically stacked frames, indicates frequency shift of the whole MRS spectrum between those frames - including thus the peaks of spectral regions of interest related to chemicals providing markers for pain.
- FIGS. 18A-B The contrasted plots seen in the pre and post frequency corrected time intensity plots shown in FIGS. 18A-B reveal the process to achieve corrected "alignment" of the previously shifted signals for coherent averaging.
- FIGS. 19A-B each of two similar views of an enhanced contrast image (FIGS. 19A-B)(though FIG. 19B reveals wider range of MRS Frames acquired in the series), shows the original frequency shifted, incoherent mis-alignment (FIG. 19 A) and frequency corrected, coherent alignment (FIG. 19B) of the water peaks from this same acquisition series.
- FIGS. 18A-B and FIGS. 19A-B all of the frames were of sufficient quality to support frequency correction.
- the frequency corrected absorption spectra for each acquisition cycle are averaged to generate an average frequency (and phase) corrected spectra for each channel, as is shown in FIG. 20.
- the selected channels (channels 1 and 2) are then averaged to produce the final spectra (FIG. 21) used for extraction of data along spectral regions of interest that are considered relevant to DDD pain diagnosis.
- FIG. 21 the final spectra used for extraction of data along spectral regions of interest that are considered relevant to DDD pain diagnosis.
- DDD-MRS Diagnostic Processor and Use for Diagnosing DDD Pain [0161] Development, application, and evaluation of a DDD-MRS diagnostic processor configured for use for diagnosing DDD pain based upon DDD-MRS acquisition series acquired from discs according to a DDD-MRS pulse sequence and DDD-MRS signal processor applications is disclosed by reference to the Examples and other disclosure provided elsewhere herein.
- the diagnostic processing aspects of the present disclosure is also represented schematically in the flow diagrams of FIGS. 9 A and 9C, and generally includes multiple individual steps or operations: (1) regional MRS spectral data extraction; and (2) diagnostic algorithm application.
- the diagnostic results will be typically displayed or otherwise produced in an appropriate fashion intended to satisfy an intended use.
- certain results will nonetheless provide insufficient signal quality, such as due to low SNR below a threshold (e.g.
- the present disclosure includes a spectrum quality analyzer which determines which signals otherwise passed through the DDD-MRS signal processor modules have sufficient signal quality to perform diagnostic algorithm, and which do not. As for the latter, these may be considered “indeterminate” or otherwise "failed test” results and thus not used diagnostically. This may prompt a repeat exam, perhaps with modified parameters intended to counteract the underlying cause of such poor quality (e.g., low SNR or lipid artifacts), such as by re-voxelating according to a different prescription (e.g., increasing voxel size, or decreasing voxel size, or moving its location), adjusting water suppression, etc.
- a spectrum quality analyzer which determines which signals otherwise passed through the DDD-MRS signal processor modules have sufficient signal quality to perform diagnostic algorithm, and which do not. As for the latter, these may be considered “indeterminate” or otherwise “failed test” results and thus not used diagnostically. This may prompt a repeat exam, perhaps with modified parameters intended to counteract the underlying cause of such poor
- the spectrum quality analyzer may compare certain aspects of the subject signal against known features associated with such corruptions, determine the potential source of corruption, and flag and/or identify to a user a suspected cause (and may further recommend one or more courses of action to attempt correcting in a re-exam).
- this spectrum quality analyzer assesses the result of signal processing, it may be considered a part of the overall DDD-MRS signal processor. However, as it also comprises one of potentially multiple analysis algorithms to determine "procedural failures" from the processed DDD-MRS acquisition and filter them out from further diagnostic processing to an affirmative result, it may also in some regards be considered a portion of the diagnostic processor.
- spectral data may be acquired for diagnostic purposes, such as processing through a diagnostic algorithm, and thus a data extractor is also provided and as featured in FIGS. 9 A and 9B.
- the data extraction or acquisition can typically involve recognizing regions along the spectrum generally associated with certain specific biomarker chemicals of diagnostic interest (e.g. spectral regions of diagnostic interest or "SRDI"), and extracting target data from such SRDIs.
- SRDI spectral regions of diagnostic interest
- These SRDI's will typically have known ranges, with upper and lower bounds, along the x-axis of the spectrum, and thus making up “bins" that are defined for respective data extraction. Examples of such bins are shown between adjacent vertical overlay lines in spectra shown in FIGS.
- FIGS. 16A-B, 17C, and 17F (where top to bottom direction of a legend on the right of FIGS. 17C and 17F corresponds with right to left direction of "bins" in those FIGS., though as also alternatively reflected with lead lines to respective chemical bin regions in FIGS. 16A-B).
- the typical SRDIs of various biomarkers of interest are elsewhere described herein, and as may be otherwise known in the literature and applicable for a given application of the present aspects in practice. In some cases, it is to be appreciate that such bins may provide only an ability to find a certain feature of the spectrum, e.g. a regional "peak", and this information can then be used to determine and extract other information (e.g.
- This data extractor may recognize a certain feature in one respective SRDI bin, e.g. PG peak, and then adjust the location for another target SRDI from where it might otherwise be sought (e.g. based upon a prescribed distance from the first recognized target peak, vs. fixed relative locations for the SRDIs along the x-axis).
- the bin and/or the spectrum can be shifted to align the regional peak with the center of the bin, and an area under the curve can be taken for a region (e.g., in the shifted bin) centered on the located regional peak.
- bin region "limits" were used for certain aspects of data extraction in the LA, AL, and PG regions of acquired and processed DDD-MRS spectra for general purpose of most data extracted and processed in the Examples: LA: 1.2 to 1.45; AL: 1.45 to 1.6; PG: 2.0 to 2.2.
- the DDD-MRS diagnostic processor can be implemented in a variety of manners, such as using computer hardware, software, or firmware, or some combination thereof.
- the DDD-MRS diagnostic processor can include one or more computer processors configured to execute a software application as computer-executable code stored in a non-transitory computer-readable medium.
- the computer processor can be part of a general purpose computer.
- the computer processor(s) used by the DDD-MRS diagnostic processor can be the same computer processor(s) used by the DDD-MRS signal processor, or it can be one or more separate computer processors.
- the DDD-MRS diagnostic processor can be implemented using specialized computer hardware such as integrated circuits instead of computer software.
- the DDD-MRS signal processor may also be implemented by multiple computers connected, for example, through a network or the internet.
- Example 1 A DDD-MRS pulse sequence and signal processor were constructed to incorporate various aspects of the present embodiments disclosed herein and were used and evaluated in clinical experience across a population of discs in chronic, severe low back pain patients and asymptomatic control volunteers. Various data extracted from features of interest along the acquired and processed DDD-MRS acquisition series for discs evaluated in these subjects were compared against control diagnoses for severe disc pain vs. absence severe disc pain, in order to develop and characterize a DDD-MRS diagnostic processor with the highest possible correlation to the control diagnoses.
- Clinical Study Population The study included 65 discs from 36 total subjects. Thirty-eight discs were from 17 patients with a clinical diagnosis of chronic, severe low back pain (LBP group), and 27 discs were from 19 asymptomatic volunteers (ASY Group). 25 discs in 12 of the LBP patients also received PD (PD Group) sufficiently contemporaneous with the DDD-MRS exam to provide appropriate comparison basis. All 65 discs were evaluated for single voxel magnetic resonance spectroscopy pulse sequence and data acquisition (DDD-MRS), and signal processor parameter development of the new DDD- MRS approach. 52 discs from 31 subjects were considered appropriate and used as controls for developing and assessing the DDD-MRS diagnostic processor for diagnostic application of the overall DDD-MRS system and approach.
- DDD-MRS single voxel magnetic resonance spectroscopy pulse sequence and data acquisition
- Study Design Standard lumbar MRI was performed on all subjects. PD performed within the PD Group was conducted by discographers per their discretionary techniques, and in all cases was performed blinded to DDD-MRS exam information. However, the PD+ criteria included a pain intesity score of greater than or equal to 6 concordant to typical back pain on PD; less than or equal to 50psi above opening pressure (where measured); and a negative control PD- disc in the same patient (except one). All PD- discs had less than 6 pain intensity scores per PD.
- Pain questionnaires including Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) and Visual Analog Scale (VAS), were completed by all subjects, and the PD Group scored significantly higher than the ASY Group according to both measures as shown in Fig. 22 (PD Group VAS and ODI on left side of graph, ASY Group VAS and ODI on right side of graph; VAS shown to left, ODI shown on right, within each group).
- the DDD-MRS pulse sequence and signal processor constructed according to the various present embodiments herein was used for each series acquisition for each disc, with data extracted from voxels prescribed at regions of interest within nuclei of all discs included in the study.
- a 3.0T GE Signa MRI system and 8-channel local spine detector coil were used with the DDD-MRS package and approach (lower 6 of the 8 channels activated for lumbar signal acquisition). Information along spectral regions of the acquired DDD-MRS signals and associated with various chemicals of interest were evaluated against control diagnoses across the PC and NC groups.
- Multi-variate logistic regression analyses were performed to fit the dicotomous response (PC vs NC) to the continuous spectral measures and develop a binary DDD-MRS diagnostic set of criteria and threshold for determining positive (MRS+) and negative (MRS-) pain diagnoses.
- a receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve was generated, and area under the curve (AUC) was calculated to assess the accuracy of the developed test (FIG. 23).
- Five-fold cross-validation was performed to assess the generalizability of the predictive relationship (FIG. 24).
- DDD-MRS diagnostic outcomes for each disc were based on a single number calculated via the developed set of criteria based upon four weighted factors derived from regions of the acquired MRS signals and associated with three chemicals ⁇ PG, LA, and alanine (AL). It is noted, however, that LA and AL regions are relatively narrow and immediately adjacent to each other, and in some cases the true respective signals representing these actual chemical constituents may overlap with each other and/or into the adjacent region's location. Furthermore, either or both of the LA and AL regions may also overlap with possible lipid contribution, which was believed to be observed in some cases (which may include signal from adjacent tissues such as bone marrow of bordering vertebral body/s).
- Threshold -[log(PG/LA*(0.6390061)+PG/AL*(1.45108778)+PG/vol*(1.34213514)
- PG peak measurement in PG region
- AL peak measurement in AL region
- LA peak measurement in LA region
- vol volume of prescribed voxel in disc used for MRS data acquisition.
- Tables 3 and 4, and Figs. 25A-27 show various aspects of the resulting clinical comparison data for DDD- MRS vs. control diagnostic data, which data and comparisons are further described as follows.
- DDD-MRS results also correlated with PD pain intensity scores (R 2 .73)(not shown).
- the mean DDD-MRS algorithm results for the ASY group were -1.4 ⁇ .63, which differed significantly vs. PD+ (p ⁇ .0001), but were not significantly distinguishable vs. PD- results (p 0.46)(FIGS. 25A-B).
- FIG. 28 shows a comparison of the AUC for MRI alone vs. MRI + DDD-MRS, per meta analysis of previously reported AUC data for MRI for this indication. This is further compared in the graph against a recent study reporting AUC for MRI alone vs.
- FIG. 30A shows DDD-MRS diagnostic algorithmic results according to this Example for eight (8) L4-L5 discs in eight (8) asymptomatic pain free volunteers examined twice - each on 2 separate dates, with trend between sequential results for each disc shown in respective lines between columns (1) and (2) along the x-axis of the graph.
- DDD-MRS processor for post-processing acquired MRS signals were also evaluated across a sub-set sampling of the DDD-MRS data derived from the clinical population under this study of this Example.
- DDD-MRS spectra/spectrum the SNR of the processed DDD-MRS signals
- a freeware digitization program (WinDIGTM, Ver 2.5, copyright 1996, D.Lovy) was used to digitize both final DDD-MRS results and "screen shot” images.
- the "screen shot” images were reverse-imaged using MS Paint prior to digitization.
- the output of the digitizer program is an array of integers in a comma-separated values (CSV) file format.
- CSV data files were imported to MicrosoftTM ExcelTM and re-plotted as shown in FIGS. 31A-B.
- RMS signal / RMS noise 10 * logio (RMS signal / RMS noise).
- the RMS value was calculated by taking the sum of squares of the data section, calculating the mean of the sum of squares, and then taking the square root of the mean. Since the spectra are power amplitude plots, the log base 10 of the ratio of the RMS values is then multiplied by 10 to generate the SNR in dB.
- FIG. 31 A shows a digitized DDD-MRS spectral plot and accompanying SNR information
- FIG. 31C shows the calculated SNR for the pre- and post-processed spectra, with significant majority of the pre-processed spectral SNR shown on the left side histogram distribution of the plot falling below 5 (and also much of the data below 3), but with a significant majority of the post-processed spectral SNR shown on the right side histogram distribution of the plot falling above 3 (all but 1) and even above 5 (all but just 2).
- the post-processed signals were higher SNR than pre-processing, generally along a range between 2 to 8 times higher SNR (with only one point falling below 2x improvement, though still about 50% improved).
- the mean absolute improvement was about lOdB
- the mean ratio improvement was over 4x
- the mean % improvement was well over 300% in converting from pre- to post-processed signals according to the present embodiments.
- FIGS. 32A and 32B show two different examples of DDD-MRS diagnostic display results for two different patients in the clinical study featured under this Example 1. These patients have similar disc degeneration profiles as seen on the MRI images, with dark disc at L5-S1 and relatively healthy discs revealed above at L4-L5 and L3- L4 in each patient. As also shown in each of these figures, both patients also had positive discogram results at L5-S1. However, as also shown in these two comparison Figures, the patient featured in FIG. 32A had a negative discogram result (e.g. non-painful diagnosis) at L4-L5, whereas the patient featured in FIG.
- a negative discogram result e.g. non-painful diagnosis
- the non-invasive DDD-MRS results matched these invasive discography results at all disc levels.
- the DDD-MRS approach provides the distinct benefit of providing the diagnostic information required, while leaving all discs uncompromised due to the non-invasive nature of the approach.
- the differentiation of painful and non-painful lumbar degenerative discs is an important goal in the accurate assessment of pain generators, and in guiding clinical management of patients with lumbar degenerative disc disease.
- the novel application of Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy developed and evaluated under this study proposes a noninvasive, objective, and quantifiable measure of the chemical composition of the lumbar intervertebral disc.
- the MRS diagnostic algorithm developed and used in this study demonstrates a high degree of sensitivity in identifying patients with a clinical assessment of lumbar discogenic pain and a positive discogram, and a high degree of specificity in identifying levels that are not painful, without any false positive results observed in asymptomatics.
- the DDD-MRS diagnostic algorithm was determined in a three-stage process.
- the form of the factor dependence was estimated using Screening Platform in JMP.
- the dependent variable was chosen to be pain status
- the candidate independent variables were chosen to be proteoglycan, lactate, and alanine (either raw values or values normalized by voxel volume and/or BMI).
- the Screening Platform then identified candidate terms with associated p- values. These would include either individual factors, or products of multiple factors. Terms with p- values less than 0.05 were selected as candidates for further consideration.
- candidate terms from the Screening Platform were entered as independent predictors in the Logistic Platform of JMP. This platform was used to conduct logistic regression analysis to identify statistically-significant terms plus their parameter estimates.
- the Logistic Platform fits the probabilities for the response category (pain/no-pain status) to a set of continuous predictors (metabolite terms). The fit quality was judged by the coefficient of determination R 2 and the p- value.
- candidate terms were brought into the Logistic model to judge their influence on model performance.
- ROC Receiver-Operator curves
- BLA is the BMI corrected LA spectral peak
- VBLAAL is the ROI volume and BMI normalized sum of the LA and AL spectral peaks
- MAXLAAL is the maximum of either the LA or AL peaks
- PG is the n-acetyl spectral peak.
- the present linear regression equation of this Example 2 uses similar features as its predecessor such as chemical peak values and peak ratios, but in addition uses features normalized for voxel volume and BMI (e.g. "VB" designating both). Increased body fat (increased BMI) will reduce chemical peak values because the voxel is physically further away from the RF coil resulting in reduced signal strength and chemical peak values.
- BMI value is adjusted (normalized ) by the mean BMI of the population. The adjusted BMI value thus applies a proportional "gain" to chemical peak values otherwise reduced by large BMI.
- the equation also defines a two new features. The first consists of combined regions of interest (ROI) lactate (LA) and alanine (AL) regions to create LAAL. The second is a region called MAXLAAL whose value is the greater of the two regions.
- ROI regions of interest
- LA lactate
- AL alanine
- a final development to the diagnostic engine is the application of an indeterminate band to the classification process.
- This band lies between the highly probable pain and pain free states and is statistically determined from the distribution of the two disc populations. Diagnostic scores that fall within this band are determined to be procedural failures because of the low probability to diagnose either way. When applied this band results in one false negative (a positive discography disc diagnosed as pain free).
- FIG. 34A shows the distribution of this algorithmic data across the combined data set via the formulaic algorithmic "score" for each disc plotted against designation of the discs as fitting within the positive controls (positive discogrammed discs, or PD+), negative controls (negative discogrammed discs in pain patients, or PD-, combined with discs from asymptomatic control volunteers or "ASY” discs), and versus these two negative control sub-populations alone.
- positive controls positive discogrammed discs, or PD+
- negative controls negative discogrammed discs in pain patients, or PD-, combined with discs from asymptomatic control volunteers or "ASY” discs
- positive match to positive discogram, or negative match to negative discogram or discs from asymptomatic subjects are as follows: 12/13 (92%) of Positive Discography; 13/13 (100%) of Negative Discography; 48/48 (100%) of Asymptomatics - thus there were no false positive results in 62 negative combined controls, and only 1/13 presumed false negative result among 13 positive control discs.
- FIG. 34B shows another distribution of the same results for this same data set, but as converted to % probability prediction a disc is painful (as generated by rank ordering of the logistic regression analysis and results).
- Certain signal quality criteria were also used in this Example 3 to determine each of three classifications of acquired results - namely recognizing the following sub-groups: (1) a first spectral group with clearly apparent lipid signal (then given its own logistic regression model and resulting algorithm), and (2) a second spectral group absent any obvious lipid signal that was still further sub-classified into still further sub-groups: (2)(a) spectra with significant PG/LAAL peak ratios over a determined criteria threshold, and (2)(b) the remaining non-lipid signals not meeting this criteria also given its own second logistic regression model and resulting algorithm.
- the three classifier equations that were developed resulted in 100% procedural success and 100% separation for differentiating painful from non-painful discs in all 79 discs evaluated.
- Example 1 A comparison of SNR for post-processed versus pre-processed DDD-MRS spectra acquired per this Example was performed similarly as featured above for Example 1 data set (e.g. FIGS. 31A-H), except using absorption spectra for both pre- and post- processed data, and per the expanded clinical data set represented in this Example 3. These were otherwise analyzed similarly as was done in those prior Figures for the prior Example 1.
- the form of the factor dependence was estimated using Screening Platform in JMP.
- the dependent variable was chosen to be pain status
- the candidate independent variables were chosen to be proteoglycan, lactate, and alanine (either raw values or values normalized by ROI volume and/or BMI).
- the Screening Platform then identified candidate terms with associated p- values. These would include either individual factors, or products of multiple factors. Terms with p-values less than 0.05 were selected as candidates for further consideration.
- candidate terms from the Screening Platform were entered as independent predictors in the Logistic Platform of JMP. This platform was used to conduct logistic regression analysis to identify statistically-significant terms plus their parameter estimates.
- the Logistic Platform fits the probabilities for the response category (pain/no-pain status) to a set of continuous predictors (metabolite terms). The fit quality was judged by the coefficient of determination R 2 and the p-value.
- candidate terms were brought into the Logistic model to judge their influence on model performance.
- ROC Receiver-Operator curves
- VV voxel volume or VV
- BMI voxel volume or VV
- LA absorption peak VV and BMI adjusted AL absorption peak
- W and BMI adjusted AL AUC area under the curve
- ALAUC area under the curve
- NAAAUC square root of the VV and BMI adjusted N-acetyl AUC or "NAAAUC”
- the spectra with suspected lipid contamination (Group A) were also analyzed using the three-step analysis procedure. This resulted in two terms that separated positive from negative discs: the square root of the VV and BMI adjusted LA peak, and the VV and BMI adjusted ratio of n-acetyl to LAAL. When taken together, the partition plus logistic regression approach success fully separated all negative from all positive discs.
- FIGS. 34A-F The SNR evaluation of the post-processed versus pre-processed absorption spectra plots per this Example are shown in FIGS. 34A-F, and demonstrate signficant SNR increase via the DDD-MRS signal processor aspects deployed for this data set in the Example 3, and also shows vast majority of the resulting signals to have sufficiently robust SNR for target regional chemical signal feature measurements. More specifically, FIG. 34A shows vast majority of the post-processed SNR above 3 (except only 2 cases), and in fact over 5, though much of the pre-processed spectra were below these levels. FIG. 34B shows the average pre-processed SNR of only slightly above 4, while the average post-processed
- FIG. 34D shows about a 3.5 dB average SNR increase or about 2.2x (FIG. 34E) versus the pre-processed SNR.
- LAVVBMI equals the voxel volume and BMI adjusted LA peak value.
- PG/MAXLAAL equals the PG peak value divided by the maximum peak value of the
- LAVVBMI is the voxel volume and BMI adjusted LA peak value
- ALVVBMI is the voxel volume and BMI adjusted AL peak value
- ALAUCVVBMI is the AL region area under the curve as voxel volume and BMI adjusted
- PGAUCVVBMI is the PG region area under the curve as voxel volume and BMI adjusted.
- FIG. 35 An example of a Group A spectra including suspected lipid signal from an asymptomatic control L5-S1 disc is shown in FIG. 35.
- Source of lipid in a given signal is not known, and may come from several different sources. Lipid signal is often observed however to result from capturing lipid-enriched vertebral body endplates by the voxel prescribed, and often (though not always) in an oblique, severely compromised (crushed) L51 disc. Another source of lipid contamination may be due to patient movement during the MRS acquisition, also involving end-plate artifact. It may also come as out of voxel signal in some cases, and may in fact come appropriately from within discs.
- LAWBMI LA peak adjusted by voxel volume and BMI
- ALVVBMI LA peak adjusted by voxel volume and BMI
- PGAUCVVBMI the PG area under the curve (AUC) adjusted by voxel volume and BMI
- ALAUCWBMI AL area under the curve (AUC) adjusted by voxel volume and BMI
- PG/MAXLAAL is the ratio PG peak to the maximum peak of either LA or AL.
- Example 3 in particular, pursued according to the present DDD-MRS embodiments of this disclosure, demonstrate that data from absorption mode spectral acquisitions may be used to partition spectra based on seperating lipid from non-lipid signals and via a relationship of PG/MAXLAAL prior to classification to achieve 100% procedural success and 100% accurate diagnosis.
- the recognition of this may be done automatically using several techniques. For example, this may be done by determining linewidth in the LAAL region (where lipid coexists, if present), LAAL peak amplitude exceeding a threshold, LAAL peak/power(e.g. AUC), by the ability to detect a PG peak, or by the combination of any of the aforementioned techniques, as may be applied against thresholds determined empirically or otherwise to represent a valid test for the signal differentiation.
- Example 4 A DDD-MRS exam according to the DDD-MRS pulse sequence, signal processing, and certain diagnostic algorithm aspects of the present disclosure was conducted in a synthetic "phantom" spine intended to simulate certain aspects of a lumbar spine with controlled, known chemical environments with respect to aqueous preparations of varying concentrations and relative ratios between n-acetyl acetate (NAA) and lactic acid (LA) in simulated discs providing regions of interest for voxel prescription and DDD-MRS examinations for test validation purposes.
- NAA n-acetyl acetate
- LA lactic acid
- Sagittal plane MRI images from a GE Signa 3.0T of the two lumbar spine phantoms shown in FIGS. 40A-B included a longitudinal series of simulated disc chambers along a column and floating in mineral oil.
- the simulated disc chambers were filled with buffered solutions of lithium lactate (LA) and n-acetyl aspartate (NAA) as indicated in Table 6.
- Phantom “B” shown in FIG. 40A also had alternating chambers that were also filled with mineral oil to simulate vertebral bodies (VBs), whereas the Phantom “C” shown in FIG. 40B had the discs in immediately adjacent succession without intervening simulated VBs.
- Voxels were prescribed within various discs among the phantoms for varied range of target chemicals.
- Metabolite signal (Smet) for NAA was measured by integrating signal power over a range or "bin” centered on spectral peak with width of +/- 0.1 PPM. Lactate signal was measured by integrating over bin ranging from 0.1 PPM on either side of observed doublet peak. Unsuppressed water signal (Suw) measured over water peak +/- 0.5PPM. Metabolite concentrations (CM) were then calculated using the following formulaic relationship:
- CM ( Smet / Suw ) x ( Nw / Nmet) x C water x K;
- K correction factor for each phantom based on relaxation, signal measurement and acquisition factors.
- Factors underlying "K" were not characterized, thus K was solved for each acquisition based on known actual concentrations of each metabolite to derive an average K value for each phantom which was then applied uniformly across the phantom acquisitions to solve for each CM.
- Example 4 operation of the DDD- MRS system operation through respective modes of pulse sequence spectral acquisition, signal processing, and data extraction was verified to provide robust results with respect to NAA and LA chemical concentrations, and ratios therebetween, in this controlled simulated test environment. This provides some degree of verification with respect to the accuracy and robust operation of the DDD-MRS system in other applications for performing similar operations in vivo.
- the present disclosure contemplates that comparing the channels, and using only the "strongest” channel(s), significantly improves signal quality and thus data acquired and processed in performing a diagnosis.
- This "channel isolation/selection” is considered uniquely beneficial to the DDD pain application contemplated herein, and can be done manually as contemplated herein, though the present disclosure also includes automating this operation to compare and choose amongst the channels for a given voxel scan via an automated DDD-MRS signal processor disclosed.
- phase and/or frequency "shifts” are contemplated herein for correcting for one or both of these phase and/or frequency "shifts" among the repetitions of an acquisition series acquired at a channel during a single voxel scan.
- the observed results of such processing have been higher signal quality, with higher signal-to-noise ratio, and/or more narrow defined signals at bands of interest to spectral regions associated with chemicals believed (and correlated) to be relevant for diagnosing disc pain (e.g., PG and/or LA and/or AL).
- the spectral peak region associated with water is typically the most prominent and highest amplitude signal across the spectrum.
- This peak and its location relative to a baseline is used according to certain of the present embodiments to define a given shift in a signal, and thus that shift at the water region is used to correct the entire spectral signal back to a defined baseline. As water peak shifts, or conversely is corrected, so does the rest of the spectrum including the target chemical markers relevant to conducting diagnoses.
- This degree and location of the water peak may also be used to determine and edit acquisition frames which are sufficiently abnormally biased relative to the other acquisition frames to adversely impact spectral data (or unable to "grab and shift"), e.g. frame editing according to further embodiments.
- corrections contemplated herein aligns the repetitions to phase and/or frequency coherence, and thus the resulting averaging achieved is desirably more "coherent" averaging. It is further contemplated that these shifts may be observed and corrected in either time or frequency domain (especially regarding frequency shift), and while certain embodiments are described herein in detail corrections yielding similarly improved results may be made in either domain (again esp. re: frequency coherent correction).
- the present disclosure provides an empirically derived relationship between four weighted factors that involve data derived from three regions of MRS spectra acquired from discs that are generally associated with three different chemicals, namely PG, LA, and AL.
- Other support exists to suspect these identified chemicals may be active culprits in disc pain, e.g. reducing PG, and increasing LA and AL, as factored in the diagnostic relationship developed and applied herein.
- More directly, at least a sub-set of these factors used in this diagnostic developed relationship have been directly correlated to disc pain (e.g. PG/LA ratio per prior 1 IT studies performed ex vivo).
- the normal intervertbral disc is avascular and disc cells function under anaerobic conditions.
- Anaerobic metabolism such as in the setting of oxygen deprivation and hypoxia, causes lactate production.
- Disc pH is proportional to lactate concentration.
- Lactic acid produces pain via acid sensing ion channels on nociceptors.
- Proteoglycan content within the nucleus pulposus decreases with disc degeneration, which is also associate with dehydration e.g. via "darkened” disc nuclei seen on T2 MRI.
- ChondVOItin sulfate proteoglycans inhibit nerve ingrowth.
- Nerve ingrowth is increased in degenerative painful discs. (Brown, Hukkanen et al. 1997; Coppes, Marani et al. 1997; Freemont, Peacock et al. 1997; Freemont, Watkins et al. 2002)
- Discography is the current gold-standard of diagnostic care for differentiating painful discs, but is controversial due to being: invasive, painful, subjective, technique/operator dependent, frequently challenged due to high false positive rates (principally as indicated in studies with asymptomatic volunteers), and risky to the patient.
- Proteoglycan and lactate within discs have unique MR signatures that can be identified and objectively measured using MR Spectroscopy, and a calculated ratio based on these measures has significantly differentiated painful from non-painful discs in ex vivo studies of surgically removed discs.
- MR Spectroscopy MR Spectroscopy
- the further inclusion of alanine - related to lactate to extent of both providing biomarkers for hypoxia having reasonable suspected basis in pain cascade - has resulted in similarly accurate predictive values for the platform in vivo.
- alanine - related to lactate to extent of both providing biomarkers for hypoxia having reasonable suspected basis in pain cascade - has resulted in similarly accurate predictive values for the platform in vivo.
- 99% accuracy resulted and including 5/5 successes in prospective application.
- DDD-MRS approaches can thus non-invasively, painlessly, and objectively measure and quantify proteoglycan and lactate-related signatures (and for alanine spectral region) of intervertebral discs in vivo using a novel software upgrade to commercially available MRI systems, and a novel diagnostic algorithm based at least in part upon these in vivo measures reliably distinguishes painful vs. non-painful discs with a lower false positive rate predicted versus discography.
- Rho GTPase activity alleviates chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan-dependent inhibition of neurite extension.
- the present disclosure provides a specific diagnostic relationship algorithm that produces a particular range of diagnostic results that compare with high correlation with control measures for pain/non-pain in discs evaluated.
- this is the result of statistically generated correlation and retrospective approach to data fitting. While appropriate for diagnostic algorithm development and the specific result disclosed herein is considered highly beneficial, this may migrate to other specific algorithms that may be more preferred though without departing from the broad scope intended for the various aspects of this disclosure.
- Such modifications may be the result of further data processing across more samples, for example, and may affect the "weighting" multipliers associated with each factor used in the algorithm, or which factors are featured in the algorithm, or which regions or features of the MRS spectra are even used as the signatures from which data is derived and used in the algorithm. This has been demonstrated by way of the Examples 1-3 provided herein, and wherein three different specific diagnostically relevant and viable approaches are presented and described for similar data sets (e.g. in particular comparison between Examples 2 and 3 of the same clinical data set).
- DDD-MRS diagnostic processor herein disclosed and diagnostic results provided therefrom, as disclosed in context of clinical data presented under Example 1 (and late by Examples 2 and 3), provide binary MRS+ and MRS- results for severe pain and absence of severe pain in discs, respectively.
- the results are also quantified along a scaled range which may be appropriately interpreted by a diagnostician as "levels" of relevance along the pain/non-pain range. Such interpretation may impact the direction of pain management decisions, such as which discs to treat, how to treat, or not to treat at all.
- DDD-MRS diagnostic information for utility to appropriate clinicians is demonstrated by reference to the "% prediction painful" presentation of data shown and discussed herein (which may be instead or in combination also determined and presented as "% prediction non-painful").
- diagnostic value may be more generalized to confirmed presence or absence of any painful disc at all. Such may impact more general management decision, such as administration or avoidance of pain medication.
- the current aspects may be used to assess aspects of the chemical environments of discs, either in addition to or alternative to specific diagnostic indications such as for pain or non-pain determinations for given discs.
- This may be effectively utilitarian for example by providing measures of chemical biomarkers, such as PG, LA, AL, LAAL, etc., such as amounts or concentrations thereof in the tissues (and/or ratios).
- measures of chemical biomarkers such as PG, LA, AL, LAAL, etc.
- This may be relevant for example in other indications or applications, such as research purposes (e.g. biologies or cell therapy approaches to treating or providing prophylaxis to discs).
- This may be useful either prior to treatment, and/or following treatment to assess certain aspects of outcomes and progression of the treatment or underlying disease or condition intended to be treated (as may relate to chemicals being monitored).
- the diagnostic results may be provided in different forms than as described by the specific embodiments disclosed by reference to a particular example, such as Example 1 for example.
- binary definitive diagnoses of MRS+ and MRS- may be supplemented with "indeterminate" as a third category.
- This may, for example, represent a result of applying certain threshold criteria that must be met in order to make a definitive +/- determination.
- threshold criteria may include, for example, SNR threshold of the underlying post-processed DDD-MRS spectrum from which the diagnostic data is extracted for performing the diagnoses.
- a defined proximity of calculated diagnostic results from the DDD-MRS diagnostic processor to the zero (0) median threshold between MRS+ and MRS- diagnoses may represent a threshold under which definitive MRS+/- determination is not decidedly made by the processor.
- pulse sequence platform approach and/or specific parameter settings, and/or signal processing approaches (and/or parameter or threshold criteria settings), may be modified. Such modifications may affect resulting spectra (and data extracted therefrom) sufficiently to redistribute the regional data used for diagnostic purposes, and may thus motivate or necessitate a re-evaluation and reformation of the diagnostic algorithm that is appropriate for data acquired and/or processed under those modified approaches.
- the L5-S1 disc is typically oriented at an oblique angle relative to other lumbar discs, and has unique shape that in many circumstances challenges the ability to prescribe voxel for adequate DDD-MRS data acquisition.
- the current voxelation plan for MRS generally requires a three-dimensional "cube" of space to be defined as the voxel (a pixel with volume), typically done by an operator technician on overlay to MRI images of the region.
- the voxel volume may be maximized by angling the voxel to match the angulated disc.
- such angled voxels at this location have been observed to relate to degraded data acquisition by existing spine detector coils.
- a custom spine coil is further contemplated that angles at least one coil channel to either a pre-determined angle more representative of typical L5-S1 discs, or a range of angles may be provided by multiple such coils in a kit, or the coil channel may be given an "adjustable" angle to meet a given anatomy.
- software may be adapted to identify an angled voxel and modify the coordinate system assigned for sequence and/or multi-channel acquisition in order better acquire data from an angled voxel (e.g. where planar slices are taken through the voxel as data acquired, the planar coordinates are revised into an adjusted coordinate system that accounts for the angulation relative to the data acquisition at the channel(s)).
- a detector coil array is created with smaller coils, and/or on a flexible platform that is adjusted to more accurately fit against the lower back (vs. a planar array currently used, but for curved lower spine with increasingly angulated discs toward the lower lumbar and sacral regions).
- the relative locations and orientations of the detector coils may be sensed, with proper coordinate system assigned thereto for sequencing and acquisition during single voxel MRS of the spine (especially intervertebral discs), and which also may be adapted relative to coordinates of voxel orientation, dimensions, and shape.
- Tl-Rho An additional MRI-based pulse sequence technology has been previously disclosed called “Tl-Rho”. This is a sequence that has been alleged for detecting, measuring, and indicating the amount (e.g. concentration) of proteoglycan, via n-acetyl or n- acetyl acetate, in tissue, and furthermore for using this information for diagnostic benefit for some conditions. In one particular regard, this has been alleged to be potentially useful for monitoring degree of degeneration, in that reduced proteoglycan in discs may correlate to advancing degree of degeneration.
- the present disclosure combines Tl-Rho with other measurements, e.g. MRS measurements, in evaluating tissue chemistry for purpose of performing a diagnosis.
- the Tl-Rho measurement of proteoglycan/n-acetyl content is used to "normalize” or otherwise calibrate or compare an MRS measurement of that related region. In doing so, other metabolites in the MRS spectrum may be also calibrated for more accurately calculated "concentration" measurement.
- This calibration may be done in evaluating MRS signal quality, such as for example between channels or within a channel itself, and MRS data is used for the diagnosis.
- MRS data is used for the diagnosis.
- Tl-Rho information related to PG may be used as the data for that chemical constituent in tissue, and data for another diagnostically relevant chemical, e.g. Lactate as measured for example via MRS (or other modality), may be used in combination with the PG measurement in an overall diagnostic algorithm or evaluation.
- Such algorithms applied for diagnostic use may be empirically driven based upon experimental data which may be conducted and acquired by one of ordinary skill for such purpose based upon this disclosure.
- a database of sufficient patient data based on Tl-rho measurements (for proteoglycan) and MRS measurements (such as for PG and/or Lactate, for example) may be correlated in a multivariate logistic regression analysis against other pain indicators such as provocative discography or treatment outcomes, resulting in a highly correlative algorithm based upon the data fit. This may then be used prospectively in predicting or assessing localized pain in newly evaluated patient tissues.
- MRS techniques include particular sequence parameters that emphasize lactate for improved lactate-related data extraction, and decreasing lipid artifact (which often overlays over lactate to confound lactate data collection), but not considered as robust for other chemicals, such as potentially PG/n-acetyl.
- Tl-Rho is relatively fast to perform relative to MRS.
- one particular further embodiment uses Tl-rho for PG measurement, and MRS as enhanced for lactate measurement, and combines this data into an empirically data-driven algorithm for performing a diagnosis.
- a further aspect contemplated herein uses Tl-rho for PG measurement, in combination with pH or p02 measurement (e.g. via a sensor on a needle, such as a discography needle) to monitor local acidity in the disc (also believed to relate to lactate concentration).
- the various aspects, modes, and embodiments of the present disclosure provide, among other beneficial advancements, a significant enhancement and improvement to standard MRI for locally diagnosing painful and/or non-painful discs.
- the utility of each of these diagnoses - painful, and non-painful - is of independent value on its own. While indicating a disc is definitively painful may often augment other clinical or diagnostic indications for directing treatment to the level, indicating a disc is definitively not painful also provides valuable information to exclude a disc as possible pain culprit and avoid unnecessary intervention to the level (especially where other clinical or diagnostic indications may indicate another level as painful, but not provide definitive answer to the other level/s).
- L5-S1 discs most prevalently painful among the levels
- L5-S1 discs may often be already suspect per MRI and other indications, but the higher adjacent disc levels are indeterminate.
- FIGS. 32A-B As an enhancement to MRI, further aspects of the present disclosure provide useful diagnostic display to indicate the results in overlay context onto the MRI image itself and providing context to the structures revealed therein, such as for example as shown in FIGS. 32A-B for two different patients receiving a DDD-MRS diagnostic exam according to Example 1.
- One aspect of the present disclosure is a MRS pulse sequence configured to generate and acquire a diagnostically useful MRS spectrum from a voxel located principally within an intervertebral disc of a patient.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum from a single voxel principally located within the disc.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum from the voxel located principally within a nucleus of the disc.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum with sufficient signal-to- noise ratio (SNR) upon appropriate post-signal processing to perform at least one of: detect and measure at least one chemical constituent within the disc; and diagnose a medical condition based upon one or more identifiable signal features along the spectrum.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum from a single voxel principally located within a nucleus of the disc.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum from a voxel principally located within an intervertebral disc of the lumbar spine.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire at least one MRS spectrum from at least one voxel principally located within at least one of L3-L4, L4-L5, and L5-S1 intervertebral discs.
- These discs are the most predominant discs implicated by chronic, severe low back pain, and are also characterized by typically larger disc spaces than other higher disc levels and thus more conducive to single voxel spectroscopy (though not necessarily so limited to only these discs in all cases).
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire multiple MRS spectra from multiple voxels, respectively, principally located within each of L3-L4, L4-L5, and L5- Sl intervertebral discs.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire multiple MRS spectra from multiple voxels, respectively, principally located within each of L3-L4, and L4-L5 intervertebral discs.
- These discs are typically less oblique than L5-S1 disc, and thus represent different geometric, and perhaps in certain circumstances different biomechanical and/or biochemical, environments vs.typically more oblique L5-S1 disc, and thus may represent unique optimal approaches for diagnostic application of the present embodiments versus for the L5-S1 disc.
- the discs are substantially non-oblique, such as for example as may be relative to a relatively more oblique L5-S1 adjacent thereto.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum from the voxel located principally within the L5-S1 intervertebral disc.
- this disc level may at times present unique considerations relative to other lumbar discs that are addressed with unique relative approaches versus other lumbar discs.
- the disc is substantially oblique, such as for example relative to adjacent lumbar disc segments above this level.
- the pulse sequence is configured to operate in a first mode for a substantially non-oblique disc, and a second mode for a substantially oblique disc.
- the pulse sequence of the various aspects of the present disclosure is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum via an NMR system of at least about 1.2 tesla (T) field strength.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum via an NMR system of about 1.2 tesla (T) field strength.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum via an NMR system of at least about 1.5 tesla (T) field strength. According to another mode, the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum via an NMR system of about 1.5 tesla (T) field strength. According to another mode, the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum via an NMR system of at least about 3.0 tesla (T) field strength. According to another mode, the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum via an NMR system of about 3.0 tesla (T) field strength. According to another mode, the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum via an NMR system of about 7.0 tesla (T) field strength.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum via an NMR system in the range of about 1.2 to about 7.0 tesla (T) field strength.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum via an NMR system in the range of about 1.2 to about 3.0 tesla (T) field strength.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire the MRS spectrum via an NMR system in the range of about 1.5 to about 3.0 tesla (T) field strength. While these ranges and specific field strengths noted represent existing systems available on the market today, or at least under investigation (e.g. 7.0T), it is further contemplated that other systems outside this range may also be suitable.
- the pulse sequence comprises a chemical shift selective (CHESS) sequence.
- the pulse sequence comprises a point resolved spectroscopy (PRESS) sequence.
- the pulse sequence comprises a combination CHESS-PRESS sequence.
- the pulse sequence comprises a combination CHESS-VSS-PRESS sequence.
- the pulse sequence comprises at least one control variable (CV) parameter setting as disclosed in Table 1.
- the pulse sequence comprises all the control variable (CV) parameter settings disclosed in Table 1.
- the pulse sequence comprises an echo time (TE) in the range of about 25 to about 40 milliseconds.
- the pulse sequence comprises an echo time of about 28 milliseconds.
- the pulse sequence comprises a repetition time (TR) in the range of about 750 to about 2000 milliseconds (2 seconds).
- the pulse sequence comprises a repetition time (TR) of about 1000 milliseconds.
- the pulse sequence comprises a repetition time of about 750 milliseconds and is configured to operate with an MR system with a field strength of between about 1.2T and about 1.5T. This has been observed, for example in one particular embodiment, to be particularly beneficial for 1.5T MR applications.
- the pulse sequence comprises a repetition time of between about 1000 and about 1500 milliseconds and is configured to operate with an MR system with a field strength of between about 3T and about 7T.
- the pulse sequence is configured to adjust the repetition time (TR) with respect to the field strength of the MR system, which may be automatic in one beneficial variation, or manually set to adjust accordingly. It is to be appreciated that these settings for TR present a certain trade off with respect to time required to complete a pulse sequence acquisition series, and thus sufficiently short times to provide adequate signal quality may be optimized for time efficiency, though longer times may be done if time is available or not of essence.
- Time may be a significant consideration in many circumstances, such as for example for efficiency in conducing the exam in MR imaging center setting, and also patient comfort, in addition to longer times for exams increase opportunities for patient motion artifact etc. that could compromise results (to extent not countered by the various signal processing aspects of the present disclosure).
- the pulse sequence comprises an acquisition matrix size setting of about 1 in each dimension, with a number of spatial slices setting of 1.
- Relative degree of water signal in DDD-MRS pulse sequence acquisitions may be relevant to the ability to fully signal process such signals as intended by various aspects of the present disclosure, and thus certain aspects related to water suppression and water signal control are disclosed herein and to be appreciated with respect to the pulse sequence.
- the pulse sequence is configured to generate and acquire a repetitive frame MRS acquisition series from the voxel with signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in the water region along the spectrum of multiple said frames that is sufficiently high to be identified, yet sufficiently low to provide adequate dynamic range with sufficient signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) along other chemical regions of diagnostic interest along the spectral frames to allow the other regions to be identified and evaluated, post-signal processing and post-averaging of the frames, for diagnostic use.
- SNR signal-to-noise ratio
- SNR signal-to-noise ratio
- This experience ranged between 45 and 125 degrees for 3 rd CHESS flip angle, with an average of about 120 degrees (plus/minus about 30 degrees standard deviation). However, these settings for each acquisition are discrete, and upon achieving sufficient results a chosen setting was cast for a given acquisition. The majority of acquisitions are believed sufficient at about 85 to about 100 degrees for this third CHESS flip angle, though again may be custom set in iterative experience or via automated feedback control based upon trial and error in measured signal quality.
- the pulse sequence comprises a third CHESS flip angle of at least about 45 degrees.
- the pulse sequence comprises a third CHESS flip angle of at least about 65 degrees.
- the pulse sequence comprises a third CHESS flip angle of up to about 145 degrees.
- the pulse sequence comprises a third CHESS flip angle of up to about 125 degrees.
- the pulse sequence comprises a third CHESS flip angle of between about 45 and about 145 degrees.
- the pulse sequence comprises a third CHESS flip angle between about 65 and about 125 degrees.
- the pulse sequence comprises a third CHESS flip angle that is adjustable based upon a degree of water observed in the region of interest.
- the degree of water is observed according to a prior test pulse sequence.
- the pulse sequence is configured to operate in series following the prior test pulse sequence in a common MR exam session, and the third CHESS flip angle is automatically adjustable based upon the observed degree of water in the prior test pulse sequence.
- the third CHESS flip angle is automatically adjustable based upon a T2- weighted acquisition value for the region of interest.
- the third CHESS flip angle is automatically adjustable to a value determined based upon an empirical correlation between third CHESS flip angle and T2-weighted acquisition value for the region of interest according to a prior acquisition data set.
- the pulse sequence comprises at least one of the following CHESS flip angles: about 105 degrees (angle 1); about 80 degrees (angle 2); about 125 degrees (angle 3).
- the first CHESS flip angle can be between about 60 degrees and about 180 degrees, or between about 85 degrees and about 125 degrees.
- the second CHESS flip angle can be between about 60 degrees and about 180 degrees, or between about 65 degrees and about 105 degrees.
- the third CHESS flip angle can be between about 45 degrees and about 145 degrees, or between about 85 degrees and about 125 degrees, or between about 105 degrees and about 145 degrees.
- the pulse sequence comprises PRESS correction settings of about 1.2 for each of X, Y, and Z axes. Other PRESS correction settings can be used, such as values greater than 1.0 and less than about 1.5.
- the pulse sequence comprises at least one of the following PRESS flip angles: about 90 (angle 1); about 180 (angle 2); about 180 (angle 3).
- either or both of the second and third PRESS flip angles may be between about 150 and about 180 degrees, and in one particular embodiment may be for example about 167 degrees.
- signal quality results may be optimally determined empirically against different flip angles, and it may also be the case that a setting (e.g. 180) may not be the exact flip angle actually deployed (e.g. may actually be different, e.g. about 167 for example).
- the pulse sequence is provided in combination with an MRS signal processor according to one or more of the various aspects, modes, embodiments, variations, and or features thereof as otherwise elsewhere herein provided.
- Another aspect of the present disclosure is thus an MRS signal processor configured to process spectral data from an MRS pulse sequence.
- the MRS signal processor comprises a channel selector that is configured to select a sub-set of multiple channel acquisitions received contemporaneously from multiple parallel acquisition channels, respectively, of a multi-channel detector assembly during a repetitive-frame MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest within a body of a subject.
- the channel selector of the MRS signal processor is configured to select a sub-set of multiple channel acquisitions received contemporaneously - from multiple parallel acquisition channels, respectively, of a multi-channel detector assembly during the repetitive-frame MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a voxel principally located within an intervertebral disc within the body of the subject.
- the channel selector of the MRS signal processor is configured to automatically differentiate relatively stronger from weaker channel acquisitions received.
- the channel selector of the MRS signal processor is configured to determine and select a strongest single channel acquisition signal among the multiple channel acquisitions.
- the channel selector of the MRS signal processor is configured to determine and select the strongest single channel acquisition based upon a highest measured parameter of the single channel acquisition spectral series comprising at least one of amplitude, power, or signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of water signal in the spectrum in the selected channel relative to the other channel.
- SNR signal-to-noise ratio
- the channel selector of the MRS signal processor is configured to determine and select the strongest single acquisition channel with CHESS sequence disabled.
- the channel selector is configured to perform a channel selection that is based upon a frame averaged spectrum of the series acquired from the channel.
- the frame averaged spectrum of the series is acquired with the CHESS disabled on unsuppressed water frames.
- the channel selector of the MRS signal processor is configured to determine and select a sub-set of strongest channels based upon a range threshold based from the highest measured parameter of the strongest single channel.
- the channel selector of the MRS signal processor is configured to determine and select one or more "strongest" channels among the series based upon a threshold criteria for a feature of the channel acquisition data.
- the one or more strongest channels is determined and selected by averaging the first unsuppressed water frames for each channel (with CHESS disabled) and measuring the signal to noise ratio (SNR) of the unsuppressed water signal, determine which channel has the strongest SNR and then selecting those additional channels that fall within a threshold range, e.g. about 3dB (or may be for example a range of 1 to 6dB) of the channel with the strongest SNR.
- a threshold range e.g. about 3dB (or may be for example a range of 1 to 6dB) of the channel with the strongest SNR.
- the channel selector is provided in combination with one or more of the various other aspects, modes, embodiments, variations, and features related to other MRS pulse sequence and/or MRS signal processor disclosures provided herein.
- phase shift corrector configured to recognize and correct phase shifting within a repetitive multi-frame acquisition series acquired by a multi-channel detector assembly during an MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest within a body of a subject.
- the phase shift corrector is configured to recognize and correct the phase shifting within a repetitive multi- frame acquisition series acquired by a multi-channel detector assembly during an MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a voxel within an intervertebral disc in the body of the patient.
- the phase shift corrector is configured to recognize and correct the phase shifting in the time domain.
- the phase shift corrector is provided in combination with one or more of the various other aspects, modes, embodiments, variations, and features related to other MRS pulse sequence and/or MRS signal processor disclosures provided herein.
- Another mode of the MRS signal processor aspects of the present disclosure comprises a frequency shift corrector configured to recognize and correct relative frequency shifts between multiple acquisition frames of a repetitive multi-frame acquisition series acquired within an acquisition detector channel of a multi-channel detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest within a body of a subject.
- the frequency shift corrector is configured to recognize and correct frequency shift error between multiple acquisition frames of a repetitive multi-frame acquisition series acquired within an acquisition detector channel of a multi-channel detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a voxel within an intervertebral disc in the body of the subject.
- the frequency shift corrector is configured to recognize and correct the frequency shift error in the time domain.
- the frequency shift is recognized and corrected in the time domain by the application of the inverse of a 1 st order linear curve fit of the incremental phase estimate of time domain information in the 16 frame average of unsuppressed water frames (such as for example about 16 unsuppressed water frames of the detailed illustrative embodiments and Examples disclosed herein).
- the frequency shift corrector is configured to recognize and correct the frequency shift error in the frequency domain.
- the frequency shift is recognized and corrected in the frequency domain by transforming the time domain information in the unsuppressed water frames (e.g.
- the frequency shift corrector is configured to identify and locate a water signal in each of multiple acquisition frames of the series, compare the location of the located water signals against a reference baseline location to determine a separation shift therebetween for each frame, and to correct the shift to align the location to the baseline location by applying an appropriate offset to all the spectral data of each frame.
- the location of the water signal is estimated based upon a location range where the water signal exceeds a threshold amplitude value.
- the water signal identified and located comprises a peak value of the water signal.
- the threshold amplitude value is greater than about 0.6 and/or less than about 0.9, and the threshold amplitude value can be 0.8 in some cases.
- the frequency shift corrector is provided in combination with one or more of the various other aspects, modes, embodiments, variations, and features related to other MRS pulse sequence and/or MRS signal processor disclosures provided herein.
- Another yet another mode of the MRS signal processor aspects disclosed herein comprises a frame editor.
- the frame editor is configured to recognize at least one poor quality acquisition frame, as determined against at least one threshold criterion, within an acquisition channel of a repetitive multi- frame acquisition series received from a multi-channel detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest within a body of a subject.
- the frame editor is configured to edit out the poor quality frame from the remainder of the MRS pulse sequence series otherwise retained for further signal and/or diagnostic algorithm processing.
- the frame editor is configured to recognize the poor quality acquisition frame based upon a threshold value applied to error in location of recognized water signal from an assigned baseline location.
- the frame editor is configured to recognize the poor quality acquisition frame based upon a threshold confidence interval applied to the ability to recognize the signal location of water signal in the frame spectrum.
- the water signal location comprises a location of a peak of the water signal.
- a confidence level for the location of the water signal peak of a frame is estimated and compared to a confidence level threshold to qualify a frame for subsequent frequency correction.
- a confidence level may be determined by the following steps: (1) analyze the discrete amplitude spectrum in the range of the center-tuned frequency plus and minus 40 Hz (in the case of a 3T system, half that for a 1.5T system); (2) locate the highest peak and determine its width at the half-amplitude point; (3) determine the total spectral width of all parts of the spectrum which exceed the half-amplitude point of the highest peak; (4) form the confidence estimate by taking the ratio of the spectral width of the greatest peak divided by the total spectral width which exceeds the threshold.
- the frame editor is provided in combination with one or more of the various other aspects, modes, embodiments, variations, and features related to other MRS pulse sequence and/or MRS signal processor disclosures provided herein.
- Another mode of the MRS signal processor aspects of the present disclosure comprises an apodizer to reduce the truncation effect on the sampled data.
- the apodizer according to certain embodiments is configured to apodize an MRS acquisition frame in the time domain otherwise generated and acquired via an MRS pulse sequence aspect otherwise herein disclosed, and/or as also otherwise signal processed by one or more of the various MRS signal processor aspects also otherwise herein disclosed.
- the apodizer according to various embodiments of this mode is provided in combination with one or more of the various other aspects, modes, embodiments, variations, and features related to other MRS pulse sequence and/or MRS signal processor disclosures provided herein.
- the various MRS signal processor, aspects, modes, features, variations, and examples herein described may be configured according to further modes to operate and/or provide diagnostic information related to a tissue in a patient based upon an MRS spectrum in real-part squared representation of the acquired spectral data or processed spectrum. According to still further modes, such may be operated upon or presented as complex absorption spectrum of the acquired or processed data. Yet another mode contemplated operates and/or presents processed results as complex absorption spectrum and also as real part squared representation of the acquired and/or signal processed data.
- Another aspect of the present disclosure is an MRS diagnostic processor configured to process information extracted from an MRS spectrum for a region of interest in a body of a subject, and to provide the processed information in a manner that is useful for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with the region of interest.
- the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to process the extracted information from the MRS spectrum for a voxel principally located in an intervertebral disc of the subject, and to provide the processed information in a manner that is useful for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with the intervertebral disc.
- the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to process the extracted information from the MRS spectrum for a voxel principally located in a nucleus of the intervertebral disc, and to provide the processed information in a manner that is useful for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with the intervertebral disc.
- the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to provide the processed information in a manner that is useful for diagnosing the intervertebral disc as painful. According to another embodiment, the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to provide the processed information in a manner that is useful for diagnosing the intervertebral disc as severely painful. According to another embodiment, the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to provide the processed information in a manner that is useful for diagnosing the intervertebral disc as not severely painful. According to another embodiment, the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to provide the processed information in a manner that is useful for diagnosing the intervertebral disc as substantially non-painful. According to another embodiment, the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to diagnose the disc as painful.
- the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to diagnose the disc as severely painful. According to another embodiment, the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to diagnose the disc as not severely painful. According to another embodiment, the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to diagnose the disc as substantially non-painful. According to another embodiment, the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to diagnose the disc with respect to % probability the disc is painful. According to another embodiment, the MRS diagnostic processor is configured diagnose the disc with respect to % probability the disc is not painful.
- the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to diagnose the disc with respect to % probability the disc is painful or not painful based upon a calculated value for the disc using acquired MRS spectral information for the disc against an empirical prior test data set of similarly calculated values for other sample discs correlated with % predictive values against known or assumed classifications for such other sample discs as painful vs. non-painful.
- the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to assign a value for the disc that is referenced against a range for use in determining presence, absence, or level of pain.
- the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to provide the diagnostically useful information in a display provided contextually with an MRI image of the respective lumbar spine comprising the disc.
- the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to provide the diagnostically useful information in a display overlay onto an MRI image of the respective lumbar spine comprising the disc.
- the display overlay associates the diagnostically useful information with one or more intervertebral discs evaluated.
- the display overlay comprises a scaled legend of values along a range, and an indicator of a result referenced against the range in the legend and associated with an intervertebral disc evaluated.
- the display overlay comprises both color coding and numerical coding of results in a legend and for at least one indicator of processed information associated with at least one intervertebral disc evaluated by the diagnostic processor.
- the MRS diagnostic processor comprises a diagnostic algorithm empirically created by comparing acquired and processed MRS spectra for multiple intervertebral discs against control measures for pain, and that is configured to determine whether discs evaluated with the MRS spectra are painful or non-painful.
- the diagnostic algorithm comprises at least one factor related to spectral information extracted from MRS spectral regions associated with at least one of proteoglycan, lactate, and alanine chemicals.
- the spectral information is extracted from an MRS spectral region associated with n-acetyl resonance associated with proteoglycan.
- the extracted information related to at least one said region is adjusted according to an adjustment factor related to voxel volume.
- the extracted information related to at least one said region is divided by voxel volume.
- the extracted information related to at least one said region is adjusted according to an adjustment factor related to body mass index (BMI).
- BMI body mass index
- the extracted information related to at least one said region is multiplied by body mass index (BMI) of the patient.
- the extracted information is multiplied by BMI of the patient divided by a reference BMI.
- the reference BMI is average BMI calculated across an empirical test data set from which the diagnostic algorithm is statistically developed for correlation to the classifications.
- the extracted information related to at least one said region comprises a peak value in the region.
- the extracted information related to at least one said region comprises a power value in the region.
- the diagnostic algorithm comprises at least two factors related to spectral information extracted from the MRS spectral regions associated with at least two of said chemicals.
- the diagnostic algorithm comprises three factors related to spectral information extracted from the MRS spectral regions associated with all three of said chemicals. According to one particularly beneficial example of this feature, each of the three factors is related to one of the proteoglycan, lactate, and alanine chemicals, respectively.
- the diagnostic algorithm comprises at least two factors related to spectral information extracted from MRS spectral regions associated with at least three said chemicals.
- a first factor is related to spectral information extracted from the MRS spectral region associated with proteoglycan (e.g. n-acetyl peak region), and a second factor is related to spectral information extracted from MRS spectral regions associated with lactate and alanine in combination.
- the diagnostic algorithm comprises a factor related to spectral information extracted from MRS spectral regions associated with each of lactate and alanine chemicals in combination.
- the factor comprises maximum peak value across the combination of the lactate and alanine spectral regions.
- the factor comprises a power value across the combination of the lactate and alanine spectral regions.
- the diagnostic algorithm comprises at least two said factors related to spectral information extracted from the MRS spectral regions associated with all three of said chemicals.
- at least one said factor is weighted by a constant.
- at least one said factor comprises a ratio of at least two values associated with information extracted from the MRS spectra at regions associated with at least two of proteoglycan, lactate, and alanine chemicals.
- the algorithm comprises four factors associated with
- the algorithm comprises four factors associated with MRS spectral data associated with proteoglycan region divided by voxel volume, lactate region divided by voxel volume, proteoglycanrlactate region ratio, and proteoglycan: alanine region ratio.
- the four factors are weighted by constants.
- LA peak measurement in LA region
- vol volume of prescribed voxel in the disc used for MRS data acquisition.
- the algorithm is configured to calculate a diagnostically useful value as follows:
- the negative multiplier inverts negative values, otherwise corresponding with painful results to positive numbers as more colloquially correponding with "postive" test results indicating pain condition is present, and visa versa for negative test results; and the log function provides collapse of data distribution spread not necessary for all applications and not necessarily altering ultimate results).
- the calculated diagnostically useful value is compared against a threshold value of zero (0) to determine pain diagnosis.
- positive calculated values are considered painful and negative calculated values are considered non-painful diagnoses.
- the diagnostic algorithm is based at least in part upon a feature associated with a combined spectral region associated with lactate and alanine chemicals.
- the diagnostic algorithm is based at least in part upon a power measurement taken along an MRS spectral region that combines regions associated with lactate and alanine chemicals.
- the diagnostic processor is provided in combination with one or more of the various other aspects, modes, embodiments, variations, and features related to other MRS pulse sequence and/or MRS signal processor disclosures also provided herein.
- the MRS diagnostic processor may be configured to implement the following equation:
- BLA is the BMI corrected LA spectral peak
- VBLAAL is the ROI volume and BMI normalized sum of the LA and AL spectral peaks
- MAXLAAL is the maximum of either the
- LA or AL peaks LA or AL peaks
- PG is the n-acetyl spectral peak.
- the MRS diagnostic processor may be configured to implement one or more of the following equations:
- LAVVBMI equals the voxel volume and BMI adjusted LA peak value.
- PG/MAXLAAL equals the PG peak value divided by the maximum peak value of the
- LAVVBMI is the voxel volume and BMI adjusted LA peak value
- ALWBMI is the voxel volume and BMI adjusted AL peak value
- ALAUCVVBMI is the AL region area under the curve as voxel volume and BMI adjusted
- PGAUCVVBMI is the PG region area under the curve as voxel volume and BMI adjusted.
- Another aspect of the present disclosure comprises a diagnostic system configured to generate information useful for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment in a tissue of a subject based at least in part upon a combination of lactate- related and alanine-related factors measured or estimated in the tissue.
- the diagnostic system is configured to generate the useful information based at least in part upon one combination lactate-alanine (LAAL)-related diagnostic factor related to a combination of lactate-related and alanine-related factors measured or estimated in the tissue.
- LAAL lactate-alanine
- the combination LAAL factor provides useful information as a LAAL biomarker for hypoxia in the tissue.
- the diagnostic system is further configured to provide the useful information based on the LAAL factor in combination with a second factor related to a third chemical-related factor measured or estimated in the tissue.
- the third chemical-related factor comprises a biomarker associated with enervation of the tissue.
- the third chemical-related factor is associated with proteoglycan content in the tissue.
- the diagnostic system comprises an MRS diagnostic processor, and the lactate-related and alanine-related factors comprise features associated with lactate- related and alanine-related regions of an MRS spectrum of a region of interest in the tissue.
- the MRS diagnostic processor is further configured to generate the useful information based at least in part upon one combination lactate-alanine (LAAL)-related diagnostic factor related to a combination of the lactate- related and alanine-related factors measured or estimated in the tissue.
- LAAL lactate-alanine
- the combination LAAL factor comprises a maximum peak spectral value in the combined LAAL region of the MRS spectrum.
- the combination LAAL factor comprises a measured or estimated overall power value in the combined LAAL region of the MRS spectrum.
- an MRS system comprising an MRS pulse sequence, MRS signal processor, and MRS diagnostic processor, and which is configured to generate, acquire, and process an MRS spectrum for providing diagnostically useful information associated with a region of interest in a body of a patient.
- the MRS system comprising the MRS pulse sequence, MRS signal processor, and MRS diagnostic processor, is configured to generate, acquire, and process the MRS spectrum for a voxel principally located in an intervertebral disc in the body of the patient and to provide diagnostically useful information associated with the disc.
- the voxel is principally located in a nucleus of the disc.
- the diagnostically useful information is useful for diagnosing pain or absence of pain associated with the disc.
- Various further modes of this aspect are contemplated that comprise one or more of the various aspects, modes, embodiments, variations, and features of the MRS pulse sequence, MRS signal processor, and MRS diagnostic processor as elsewhere described herein.
- the MRS pulse sequence comprises a combination CHESS-PRESS sequence.
- the MRS pulse sequence comprises a combination CHESS-VSS-PRESS sequence.
- the MRS pulse sequence comprises a TE of about 28ms and a TR of about 1000ms, whereas TE according to further embodiments can range from between about 25 to about 40ms and TR can typically range from between about 750 to about 2000ms.
- the MRS signal processor comprises at least one of a channel selector, a phase shift corrector, an apodizer, a frame editor, a frequency shift corrector, and a frame averaging combiner.
- the MRS diagnostic processor is configured to calculate and provide diagnostically useful information for diagnosing pain associated with at least one intervertebral disc based upon at least one MRS spectral region associated with at least one of proteoglycan, lactate, and alanine chemicals.
- information associated with each of the MRS spectral regions associated with each of these chemicals is used by the MRS diagnostic processor in providing the diagnostically useful information.
- a combination LAAL factor associated with a combination of the lactate-related and alanine- related MRS spectral regions is used.
- the combination LAAL factor is used in further combination with a second factor associated with a proteoglycan-related (such as for example n-acetyl) MRS spectral region for an overall diagnostic algorithm.
- each or all of the respective MRS system components described is provided as user or controller operable software in a non-transitory computer readable storage medium configured to be installed and operated by one or more processors.
- a non- transitory computer operable storage medium is provided and stores the operable software.
- Computer software can comprise computer executable code stored in a computer readable medium that, when executed, performs the functions described herein.
- computer- executable code is executed by one or more general purpose computer processors.
- any feature or function that can be implemented using software to be executed on a general purpose computer can also be implemented using a different combination of hardware, software, or firmware.
- such a module can be implemented completely in hardware using a combination of integrated circuits.
- such a feature or function can be implemented completely or partially using specialized computers designed to perform the particular functions described herein rather than by general purpose computers.
- any such computer program instructions may be loaded onto one or more computers, including without limitation a general purpose computer or special purpose computer, or other programmable processing apparatus to produce a machine, such that the computer program instructions which execute on the computer(s) or other programmable processing device(s) implement the functions specified in the equations, algorithms, and/or flowcharts. It will also be understood that each equation, algorithm, and/or block in flowchart illustrations, and combinations thereof, may be implemented by special purpose hardware-based computer systems which perform the specified functions or steps, or combinations of special purpose hardware and computer-readable program code logic means.
- computer program instructions such as embodied in computer-readable program code logic, may also be stored in a computer readable memory (e.g., a non-transitory computer readable medium) that can direct one or more computers or other programmable processing devices to function in a particular manner, such that the instructions stored in the computer-readable memory implement the function(s) specified in the block(s) of the flowchart(s).
- a computer readable memory e.g., a non-transitory computer readable medium
- the computer program instructions may also be loaded onto one or more computers or other programmable computing devices to cause a series of operational steps to be performed on the one or more computers or other programmable computing devices to produce a computer-implemented process such that the instructions which execute on the computer or other programmable processing apparatus provide steps for implementing the functions specified in the equation(s), algorithm(s), and/or block(s) of the flowchart(s).
- FIGS. 41 A-B shows a DDD-MRS pulse sequence acquisition and output communication flow diagram.
- An MRI exam is first conducted on the patient 202 who typically is slid supine into MR system 210 while lying on a spine detector coil 220 that acquires the MR and MRS signals. This is followed by the DDD-MRS pulse sequence, as also conducted via the same MR system 210 and by a trained operator/technician 204.
- Data representative of the anatomy of the patient 202 is generated 258 (e.g., data representative of the chemical makeup of an area of interest inside the intervertebral disc of the patient's spine 252).
- the results are then packaged in a data archive folder 250 that includes information related to the MRI image 258 (if taken and retained for this purpose), voxel prescription in various relevant planes 252, prepackaged output spectra 254 (if desired for any further use, or not), complex data files for the acquired series 256.
- This is sent via PACS 260 for storage and/or further communication either as push or pull for further processing.
- the MR system 210 may be operated by a computer system or terminal 230 that can be located remotely or can be integrated into the MR system 210, to allow one or more operators 240 (or the technician 204) to provide instructions or other information to the MR system 210.
- this data package 250 may then be accessed or pushed from the PACS 260 to another local DDD-MRS engine 261, which may be a local computer 262 (and related peripheral devices such as display 264 and keyboard 266), work station, or other modality, or terminal (e.g., terminal 230), which may conduct the DDD- MRS signal processing and/or diagnostic processing and for packaged display of results as appropriate.
- This may be monitored via other remote device 290, such as via the internet 270 as shown schematically in FIG. 41 B - and this may include for example license monitoring such as on a "per click" or "volume”-related use license fee basis or other such use monitoring purposes (e.g. data collection and analysis purposes, e.g.
- the more remote processors may be a central server 292 providing certain SAAS support to the system, or again for more monitoring.
- These files can be configured to push or be pulled electronically, such as to a remote DDD-MRS station 280 with engine components including a computer 282, monitor 284, keyboard 286, where diagnostic results such as overlaid images 288 may be seen and analyzed for example and the various processors may be stored and employed for functional use in a variety of single or multiple coordinated locations and controllers or computers, with ultimate flexibility re: specific modality for operation and storage 294 and/or communication of results.
- an MRS system (or component sequence, signal processor, or diagnostic processor useful therewith or therein), may be configured and used in manners consistent with one or more broad aspects of this disclosure for diagnosing other tissue environments or conditions than pain within an intervertebral disc. Or, such may be usefully employed for diagnosing pain or other tissue environments or conditions in other regions of interest within the body.
- Such further applications are considered within the broad scope of disclosure contemplated herein, with or without further modifications, omissions, or additions that may be made by one of ordinary skill for a particular purpose.
- various omissions, substitutions and changes in the form of the methods, systems, and devices described herein may be made without departing from the spirit of the disclosure. Components and elements may be altered, added, removed, or rearranged. Additionally, processing steps may be altered, added, removed, or reordered. While certain embodiments have been explicitly described, other embodiments will also be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art based on this disclosure.
- a computing system comprising one or more microprocessors receiving at least one signal responsive to data collected in an MR scanner, is configured to implement a magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) processing system configured to process a repetitive frame MRS spectral acquisition series generated and acquired for a voxel principally located within an intervertebral disc via an MRS pulse sequence, and acquired at multiple parallel acquisition channels of a multi-coil spine detector assembly, in order to provide diagnostic information associated with the disc, comprising: an MRS signal processor comprising a channel selector, a phase shift corrector, a frequency shift corrector, a frame editor, and a channel combiner, and configured to receive and process the MRS spectral acquisition series for the disc and to generate a processed MRS spectrum for the series with sufficient signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) to acquire information associated with identifiable features along MRS spectral regions associated with unique chemical constituents in the disc; and an MRS diagnostic processor configured to extract data from identifiable chemical regions in the processed MRS
- MRS magnetic resonance spect
- a physical computer readable medium stores computer executable code that causes a computing system to implement a magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) processing system configured to process a repetitive frame MRS spectral acquisition series generated and acquired for a voxel principally located within an intervertebral disc via an MRS pulse sequence, and acquired at multiple parallel acquisition channels of a multi-coil spine detector assembly, in order to provide diagnostic information associated with the disc, comprising: an MRS signal processor comprising a channel selector, a phase shift corrector, a frequency shift corrector, a frame editor, and a channel combiner, and configured to receive and process the MRS spectral acquisition series for the disc and to generate a processed MRS spectrum for the series with sufficient signal- to-noise ratio (SNR) to acquire information associated with identifiable features along MRS spectral regions associated with unique chemical constituents in the disc; and an MRS diagnostic processor configured to extract data from identifiable chemical regions in the processed MRS spectrum in a manner that provides diagnostic information for diagnosing
- MRS magnetic resonance spect
- a magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) processing method for processing a repetitive frame MRS spectral acquisition series generated and acquired for a voxel principally located within an intervertebral disc via an MRS pulse sequence, and acquired at multiple parallel acquisition channels of a multi-coil spine detector assembly, and for providing diagnostic information associated with the disc, the method comprising: receiving the MRS spectral acquisition series from the multiple acquisition channels; signal processing the MRS acquisition series, comprising selecting one or more channels among the parallel channels based upon a predetermined criteria, recognizing and correcting phase shift error among multiple frames within the series of a channel acquisition, recognizing and correcting a frequency shift error between multiple frames within the series of the channel acquisition, recognizing and editing out frames from the series based upon a predetermined criteria, combining selected and corrected channels for a combined average processed MRS spectrum; and diagnostically processing the processed MRS spectrum by extracting data from identifiable chemical regions in the processed MRS spectrum and processing the extracted data in a manner that provides MRS-based
- a computing system comprising one or more microprocessors receiving at least one signal responsive to data collected in an MR scanner, is configured to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a signal processor configured to signal process a repetitive multi-frame MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of MRS spectra frames received from multiple acquisition channels of a detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest (ROI) within a tissue in a body of a subject; and wherein the signal processor comprises a channel selector configured to measure a parameter related to MRS spectral signal quality for the acquired MRS spectral series from each acquisition channel, compare the measured parameters for the respective channels against at least one threshold criteria for channel selection, identify a number of selected channels which meet or exceed the threshold criteria and a number of other failed channels which fail to meet the threshold criteria, and retain the selected channels and discard the failed channels from the acquisition series.
- a signal processor configured to signal process a repetitive multi-frame MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of MRS spectra frames received from multiple acquisition channels of a detector assembly during
- a physical computer readable medium stores computer executable code that causes a computing system to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a signal processor configured to signal process a repetitive multi-frame MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of MRS spectra frames received from multiple acquisition channels of a detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest (ROI) within a tissue in a body of a subject; and wherein the signal processor comprises a channel selector configured to measure a parameter related to MRS spectral signal quality for the acquired MRS spectral series from each acquisition channel, compare the measured parameters for the respective channels against at least one threshold criteria for channel selection, identify a number of selected channels which meet or exceed the threshold criteria and a number of other failed channels which fail to meet the threshold criteria, and retain the selected channels and discard the failed channels from the acquisition series.
- a signal processor configured to signal process a repetitive multi-frame MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of MRS spectra frames received from multiple acquisition channels of a detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region
- a computing system comprising one or more microprocessors receiving at least one signal responsive to data collected in an MR scanner, is configured to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a signal processor configured to process a repetitive multi-frame MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of MRS spectra frames received from an acquisition channel of a detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest (ROI) within a tissue in a body of a subject; wherein the signal processor comprises a frame editor configured to measure a parameter related to signal quality for the MRS spectrum for each acquired frame of the acquisition series, compare the measured values for the parameter for the respective frames against a threshold criteria, and designate a number of successful frames that meet the threshold criteria and a number of failed frames that fail to meet the threshold criteria; and wherein the frame editor is further configured to retain successful frames in the acquisition series, and edit out the failed frames from the acquisition series if number of successful frames meets or exceeds a minimum frame number threshold, but to retain at least some of the failed frames in the
- a physical computer readable medium stores computer executable code that causes a computing system to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a signal processor configured to process a repetitive multi-frame MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of MRS spectra frames received from an acquisition channel of a detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest (ROI) within a tissue in a body of a subject; wherein the signal processor comprises a frame editor configured to measure a parameter related to signal quality for the MRS spectrum for each acquired frame of the acquisition series, compare the measured values for the parameter for the respective frames against a threshold criteria, and designate a number of successful frames that meet the threshold criteria and a number of failed frames that fail to meet the threshold criteria; and wherein the frame editor is further configured to retain successful frames in the acquisition series, and edit out the failed frames from the acquisition series if number of successful frames meets or exceeds a minimum frame number threshold, but to retain at least some of the failed frames in the acquisition series if the number of successful frames is below the minimum
- a computing system comprising one or more microprocessors receiving at least one signal responsive to data collected in an MR scanner, is configured to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a signal processor configured to process a repetitive multi-frame MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of MRS spectra frames received from an acquisition channel of a detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest (ROI) within a tissue in a body of a subject; wherein the signal processor comprises a frequency error corrector configured to calculate a confidence level in an ability to estimate frequency shift error for the MRS spectra of each frame of the series, compare each calculated confidence level for each frame against at least one threshold criteria, and determine a number of successful frames that meet or exceed the threshold criteria and a number of other failed frames that fail to meet the threshold criteria; and wherein the signal processor is further configured to automatically determine whether to (a) edit out the failed frames from the acquisition series and perform frequency shift error correction via the frequency error corrector in a manner to at least in part reverse the frequency
- a computing system comprising one or more microprocessors receiving at least one signal responsive to data collected in an MR scanner, is configured to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a signal quality evaluator configured to automatically determine whether or not an MRS spectrum acquired from a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject via an MRS pulse sequence series exam of the ROI comprises a regional signature signal along the MRS spectrum that is characteristic of lipid.
- ROI region of interest
- a physical computer readable medium stores computer executable code that causes a computing system to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a signal quality evaluator configured to automatically determine whether or not an MRS spectrum acquired from a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject via an MRS pulse sequence series exam of the ROI comprises a regional signature signal along the MRS spectrum that is characteristic of lipid.
- a signal quality evaluator configured to automatically determine whether or not an MRS spectrum acquired from a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject via an MRS pulse sequence series exam of the ROI comprises a regional signature signal along the MRS spectrum that is characteristic of lipid.
- a computing system comprising one or more microprocessors receiving at least one signal responsive to data collected in an MR scanner, is configured to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a diagnostic processor configured to provide diagnostic information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon at least one chemical factor related to information extracted from the ROI and associated with lactate (LA) and alanine (AL) chemicals.
- ROI region of interest
- LA lactate
- AL alanine
- a physical computer readable medium stores computer executable code that causes a computing system to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a diagnostic processor configured to provide diagnostic information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon at least one chemical factor related to information extracted from the ROI and associated with lactate (LA) and alanine (AL) chemicals.
- ROI region of interest
- LA lactate
- AL alanine
- a computing system comprising one or more microprocessors receiving at least one signal responsive to data collected in an MR scanner, is configured to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a diagnostic processor configured to provide diagnostic information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon a chemical factor related to information extracted from the ROI and associated with a chemical and as adjusted by an adjustment factor that comprises at least one of a voxel-related adjustment factor associated with a voxel prescribed to correspond with the ROI and related to the information extracted, and a subject-dependent variable- related adjustment factor associated with the subject.
- ROI region of interest
- a physical computer readable medium stores computer executable code that causes a computing system to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a diagnostic processor configured to provide diagnostic information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon a chemical factor related to information extracted from the ROI and associated with a chemical and as adjusted by an adjustment factor that comprises at least one of a voxel-related adjustment factor associated with a voxel prescribed to correspond with the ROI and related to the information extracted, and a subject-dependent variable-related adjustment factor associated with the subject.
- ROI region of interest
- a computing system comprising one or more microprocessors receiving at least one signal responsive to data collected in an MR scanner, is configured to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a diagnostic processor configured to provide diagnostic processed information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon taking a first MRS measurement for a chemical factor taken at a region of an MRS spectrum acquired from the ROI and associated with a chemical and comparing the first MRS measurement against a value derived from a different second measurement and that is associated with an amount of the chemical in the ROI.
- ROI region of interest
- a physical computer readable medium stores computer executable code that causes a computing system to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a diagnostic processor configured to provide diagnostic processed information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon taking a first MRS measurement for a chemical factor taken at a region of an MRS spectrum acquired from the ROI and associated with a chemical and comparing the first MRS measurement against a value derived from a different second measurement and that is associated with an amount of the chemical in the ROI.
- ROI region of interest
- a computing system comprising one or more microprocessors receiving at least one signal responsive to data collected in an MR scanner, is configured to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a diagnostic processor configured to provide diagnostic information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) of a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon a chemical factor related to information extracted from the ROI and associated with a chemical; and wherein said diagnostic information comprises a probability value assigned to a likelihood that the medical condition or chemical environment meets certain criteria in the ROI.
- ROI region of interest
- a physical computer readable medium stores computer executable code that causes a computing system to implement a medical diagnostic system, comprising: a diagnostic processor configured to provide diagnostic information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) of a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon a chemical factor related to information extracted from the ROI and associated with a chemical; and wherein said diagnostic information comprises a probability value assigned to a likelihood that the medical condition or chemical environment meets certain criteria in the ROI.
- ROI region of interest
- a medical diagnostic method comprises: using a computing system to implement a signal processor for signal processing a repetitive multi- frame MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of MRS spectra frames received from multiple acquisition channels of a detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest (ROI) within a tissue in a body of a subject; and wherein the signal processing further comprises using one or more microprocessors to operate a channel selector for measuring a parameter related to MRS spectral signal quality for the acquired MRS spectral series from each acquisition channel, comparing the measured parameters for the respective channels against at least one threshold criteria for channel selection, identifying a number of selected channels which meet or exceed the threshold criteria and a number of other failed channels which fail to meet the threshold criteria, and retaining the selected channels and discarding the failed channels from the acquisition series.
- a signal processor for signal processing a repetitive multi- frame MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of MRS spectra frames received from multiple acquisition channels of a detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest (
- a medical diagnostic method comprises: using a computing system for signal processing a repetitive multi-frame MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of MRS spectra frames received from an acquisition channel of a detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest (ROI) within a tissue in a body of a subject; wherein the signal processing further comprises using a computing system for implementing a frame editor for measuring, using one or more microprocessors, a parameter related to signal quality for the MRS spectrum for each acquired frame of the acquisition series, comparing, using the one or more microprocessors, the measured values for the parameter for the respective frames against a threshold criteria, and designating, using the one or more microprocessors, a number of successful frames that meet the threshold criteria and a number of failed frames that fail to meet the threshold criteria; and wherein the frame editing further comprises retaining, using the one or more microprocessors, successful frames in the acquisition series, and editing out the failed frames from the acquisition series if the number of successful frames meets or exceeds
- a medical diagnostic method comprising: using a computing system to execute executable code for implementing a signal processor for processing a repetitive multi-frame MRS pulse sequence acquisition series of MRS spectra frames received from an acquisition channel of a detector assembly during a MRS pulse sequence series conducted on a region of interest (ROI) within a tissue in a body of a subject; wherein the signal processing further comprises using a computing system to execute executable code for operating a frequency error corrector for calculating, using one or more microprocessors, a confidence level in an ability to estimate frequency shift error for the MRS spectra of each frame of the series, comparing, using the one or more microprocessors, each calculated confidence level for each frame against at least one threshold criteria, and determining, using the one or more microprocessors, a number of successful frames that meet or exceed the threshold criteria and a number of other failed frames that fail to meet the threshold criteria; and wherein the signal processing further comprises using a computing system to execute executable code for automatically determining whether to
- a medical diagnostic method comprises: using a computing system to execute executable code to implement a signal quality evaluator for automatically determining, using one or more microprocessors, whether or not an MRS spectrum acquired from a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject via an MRS pulse sequence series exam of the ROI comprises a regional signature signal along the MRS spectrum that is characteristic of lipid.
- ROI region of interest
- a medical diagnostic method comprises: using a computing system to execute executable code to implement a diagnostic processor for providing, using one or more microprocessors, diagnostic information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon at least one chemical factor related to information extracted from the ROI and associated with lactate (LA) and alanine (AL) chemicals.
- ROI region of interest
- LA lactate
- AL alanine
- a medical diagnostic method comprising: using a computing system to execute executable code to implement a diagnostic processor for providing diagnostic information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon a chemical factor related to information extracted from the ROI and associated with a chemical and comprising adjusting, using one or more microprocessors, the chemical factor by an adjustment factor that comprises at least one of a voxel-related adjustment factor associated with a voxel prescribed to correspond with the ROI and related to the information extracted, and a subject-dependent variable-related adjustment factor associated with the subject.
- ROI region of interest
- a medical diagnostic method comprising: using a computing system to execute executable code to implement a diagnostic processor for providing processed diagnostic information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) in a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon taking a first MRS measurement for a chemical factor taken at a region of an MRS spectrum acquired from the ROI and associated with a chemical, and comparing, using one or more microprocessors, the first MRS measurement against a value derived from a different second measurement and that is associated with an amount of the chemical in the ROI.
- ROI region of interest
- a medical diagnostic method comprises: using a computing system to execute executable code to implement a diagnostic processor for providing diagnostic information for diagnosing a medical condition or chemical environment associated with a region of interest (ROI) of a tissue in a body of a subject based at least in part upon a chemical factor related to information extracted from the ROI and associated with a chemical; and using a computing system to execute executable code for providing, using one or more microprocessors, the diagnostic information that comprises a probability value assigned to a likelihood that the medical condition or chemical environment meets certain criteria in the ROI.
- ROI region of interest
- Table 1 Examples of CV Variables for DDD-MRS CHESS-VSS-PRESS pulse sequence for generating MRS spectra useful for postprocessing and diagnosing DDD pain of lumbar intervertebral discs (e.g. in a 3.0 Tesla MRI system)
- Table 4 Example 1, Comparison of Clinical DDD-MRS Results (MRS+/-) vs.
- Table 5 Example 2, Clinical Data Set (retrospective and prospective combined)
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Abstract
Description
Claims
Priority Applications (15)
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EP10824123.3A EP2488101B1 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2010-10-14 | Mr spectroscopy system and method for examining intervertebral discs |
CA2814481A CA2814481C (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2010-10-14 | Mr spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs |
AU2010306700A AU2010306700B2 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2010-10-14 | MR spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs |
US13/444,731 US8825131B2 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2012-04-11 | MR spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs |
US14/310,683 US20150119688A1 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2014-06-20 | Mr spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs |
US14/872,986 US9724013B2 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2015-10-01 | MR spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs |
US15/669,584 US10285622B2 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2017-08-04 | MR spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs |
AU2018202869A AU2018202869B2 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2018-04-26 | MR Spectroscopy System and Method for Diagnosing Painful and Non-Painful Intervertebral Discs |
US16/408,188 US20200100698A1 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2019-05-09 | Mr spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs |
AU2019232919A AU2019232919B2 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2019-09-20 | MR Spectroscopy System and Method for Diagnosing Painful and Non-Painful Intervertebral Discs |
AU2020201823A AU2020201823B2 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2020-03-12 | Mr spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs |
AU2021254588A AU2021254588B2 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2021-10-20 | Mr spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs |
US17/528,047 US11844601B2 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2021-11-16 | MR spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs |
US18/501,441 US20240324892A1 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2023-11-03 | Mr spectroscopy system and method |
AU2023282173A AU2023282173A1 (en) | 2009-10-14 | 2023-12-11 | Mr spectroscopy system and method for diagnosing painful and non-painful intervertebral discs |
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WO2011047197A3 (en) | 2011-09-22 |
AU2021254588B2 (en) | 2023-09-14 |
CA2814481A1 (en) | 2011-04-21 |
US20180177428A1 (en) | 2018-06-28 |
EP3056919A1 (en) | 2016-08-17 |
CA3111263A1 (en) | 2011-04-21 |
AU2023282173A1 (en) | 2024-01-04 |
US8761860B2 (en) | 2014-06-24 |
US20110087087A1 (en) | 2011-04-14 |
AU2019232919B2 (en) | 2019-12-19 |
AU2018202869A1 (en) | 2018-05-17 |
AU2021254588A1 (en) | 2021-11-18 |
CA3235136A1 (en) | 2011-04-21 |
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