Stiffness, strain and blood volume, unraveling three (mechanical) properties of the brain
Summary
Mechanical properties of the brain can be indicators
for different kinds of brain diseases. Separate measurements of
different mechanical properties exist, however, little is known
about their mutual influence. This study aims to unravel the
influences of shear stiffness, volumetric strain, octahedral shear
strain and cerebral blood volume (CBV) in the human brain.
Repeated acquisitions of the intrinsic brain movement of 8
healthy subjects using a Displacement ENcoding with Stimulated
Echos (DENSE) sequence in a 7T MRI were undertaken to
calculate shear stiffness, volumetric strain and octahedral shear
strain. Shear stiffness was estimated using intrinsic Magnetic
Resonance Elastography (MRE) with nonlinear inversion. Volu-
metric stain and octahedral shear strain were calculated directly
form displacement measurements. CBV values were taken from
a brain atlas. We calculated and compared average stiffness,
strain and CBV values in 30 regions of interest located in the
cortical gray matter (GM), subcortical GM and white matter
(WM). The results show a correlation between CBV and strain
values in WM regions as well as correlations between volumetric
strain and octahedral shear strain. We did not find significant
correlations between stiffness and strain. We assume that shear
stiffness carries independent information from strain and could
thus potentially be indicators for different types of disorders or
diseases.