Diffusion imaging holds great potential for the non-invasive assessment of the glymphatic system in humans. One technique, diffusion tensor imaging along the perivascular space (DTI-ALPS), has introduced the ALPS-index, a novel metric for evaluating diffusivity within the perivascular space. However, it still needs to be established whether the observed reduction in the ALPS-index reflects axonal changes, a common occurrence in neurodegenerative diseases.
To determine whether axonal alterations can influence change in the ALPS-index.
Retrospective.
100 participants (78 cognitively normal and 22 with mild cognitive impairments) aged 50-90 years old.
3T; diffusion-weighted single-shot spin-echo echo-planar imaging sequence, T1-weighted images (MP-RAGE).
The ratio of two radial diffusivities of the diffusion tensor (i.e., λ2/λ3) across major white matter tracts with distinct venous/perivenous anatomy that fulfill (ALPS-tracts) and do not fulfill (control tracts) ALPS-index anatomical assumptions were analyzed.
To investigate the correlation between λ2/λ3 and age/cognitive function (RAVLT) while accounting for the effect of age, linear regression was implemented to remove the age effect from each variable. Pearson correlation analysis was conducted on the residuals obtained from the linear regression. Statistical significance was set at p < 0.05.
λ2 was ~50% higher than λ3 and demonstrated a consistent pattern across both ALPS and control tracts. Additionally, in both ALPS and control tracts a reduction in the λ2/λ3 ratio was observed with advancing age (r = -0.39, r = -0.29, association and forceps tract, respectively) and decreased memory function (r = 0.24, r = 0.27, association and forceps tract, respectively).
The results unveil a widespread radial asymmetry of white matter tracts that changes with aging and neurodegeration. These findings highlight that the ALPS-index may not solely reflect changes in the diffusivity of the perivascular space but may also incorporate axonal contributions.
3 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 2.
© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.