Interactive Transcript
0:01
I mentioned earlier, quantitative volumetric imaging.
0:04
So, this is an AI tool that's very easy
0:06
to add on to an MRI of the brain.
0:08
It really doesn't cost any extra time.
0:10
And it identifies and labels anatomic
0:13
structures in the brain,
0:14
then quantifies the volumes of those brain structures
0:18
and compares that to a large age and
0:20
gender match normative database.
0:23
And this allows for volumetric tracking to
0:26
assess for rate of change over time.
0:29
It improves the diagnostic value of our studies.
0:32
It helps eliminate report bias.
0:34
So, you know,
0:36
I may say that there's mo-
0:37
you know, moderately severe cerebral atrophy
0:39
with a temporal parietal predilection,
0:41
which would tell our referrals,
0:42
"Raise a red flag."
0:43
That this might be Alzheimer's.
0:44
But then the patient may come back for a follow
0:46
up study, and my colleague may say,
0:48
mild cerebral atrophy commensurate with age.
0:51
And then the referral is like,
0:52
"Well, which one is it?"
0:53
So, using a quantitative tool,
0:55
quantitative neuroimaging,
0:57
is very, very helpful in eliminating that report bias.
1:00
As I mentioned,
1:01
it's easy to add on at negligible
1:03
cost acquisition speed.
1:04
It doesn't require any external hardware.
1:07
That's all cloud-based.
1:08
It integrates seamlessly into the workflow
1:11
and quickly into PACS.
1:12
In fact,
1:13
they're processed in less than seven minutes.
1:15
So by the time you actually open the case on PACS,
1:17
the reports are always there.
1:19
There's no radiology post-processing required.
1:22
They're easy to interpret,
1:23
and we'll talk about how to interpret it.
1:25
And again,
1:26
it offers a great referral advantage because
1:28
our neurologists really love these reports.
1:30
Now,
1:31
we use quantitative volumetric imaging
1:33
for several indications,
1:34
but dementia is the one that we're focusing on today.
1:37
We actually have quantitative volumetric
1:39
imaging on our prescription pads.
1:41
So the refer would just click
1:43
brain and then click Quant,
1:45
and then they would just click the box for dementia.
1:47
And our technologists would know that it is...
1:49
that they're going to be sending the study
1:51
for quantitative neuroimaging.
1:53
The protocol is very simple.
1:54
All we need is a T1 SPGR, a thin slice,
1:57
T1 sequence for the dementia.
1:59
We use other ones for other studies, like,
2:01
we use the thin slice FLAIR for multiple sclerosis,
2:04
but for dementia, we just need this one,
2:06
and we prefer it at 1 mm
2:08
collimation with a 3D acquisition.
2:11
This is what segmentation looks like.
2:13
This happens to be a NeuroQuant,
2:17
and this is what it looks like.
2:18
This is another company.
2:20
This one happens to be iPro-Brain.
2:21
And here again, you see the segmentation.
2:24
This is, you know, individual segmentations
2:27
of white matter lesions,
2:28
that patient happens to have multiple sclerosis.
2:30
Here's another company here.
2:31
This happens to be Quantib,
2:33
and that's what the segmentation looks like there.
2:35
So, let's take a look at these reports.
2:38
This is a NeuroQuant report.
2:39
We're given the volume of key structures in the brain.
2:42
So the hippocampal occupancy score,
2:44
the hippocampus,
2:45
the entorhinal cortex,
2:47
the superior and inferior lateral ventricles.
2:49
And importantly,
2:50
we're giving their normative percentile here.
2:52
So anything in red is going to be more than two
2:55
standard deviations outside of the mean.
2:57
Here are plot graphs.
2:58
Anything in the pink zone
3:00
is two standard deviations outside of the mean.
3:02
So you can see the hippocampal occupancy
3:04
score is way down here in the red zone,
3:07
as is the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex.
3:10
And as the hippocampi shrink,
3:12
there's compensatory enlargement of those inferior
3:14
lateral ventricles.
3:15
So we get enlargement here,
3:17
statistically significant enlargement of the inferior
3:19
lateral ventricles.
3:20
The Triage Brain Atrophy report,
3:22
which is the second page of the report.
3:24
I tend to use this to look for patterns when trying
3:27
to differentiate between different neurodementia syndromes.
3:30
Anything red is statistically significant,
3:33
and it's just a more detailed breakdown of areas of the brain.
3:37
This is another quantitative report.
3:38
This happens to be an iPro-Brain report.
3:40
Again, we're given the volume of the key structures,
3:43
frontal, parietal, temporal, and occipital cortex,
3:46
and the hippocampus,
3:47
and the normative percentiles are here.
3:50
Anything in the blue zone is more than one
3:52
standard deviation below the mean.
3:55
And anything in this sort of yellow
3:57
zone here is at tenth percentile.
4:00
This bullseye graph points to areas that
4:03
are most significant. So again,
4:05
this is used to help differentiate between
4:07
the different types of dementia,
4:08
Alzheimer's versus frontotemporal dementia versus
4:11
dementia with Lewy bodies, etc.
4:13
Second page of the report gives the whole brain volume
4:16
and the volumes of other key structures,
4:18
as well as their normative percentile.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.