Quantifying the test-retest reliability of cerebral blood flow measurements in a clinical model of on-going post-surgical pain: A study using pseudo-continuous arterial spin labelling

Journal article


Hodkinson, DJ, Krause, K, Khawaja, N, Renton, TF, Huggins, JP, Vennart, W, Thacker, M., Mehta, MA, Zelaya, FO, Williams, SCR and Howard, MA (2013). Quantifying the test-retest reliability of cerebral blood flow measurements in a clinical model of on-going post-surgical pain: A study using pseudo-continuous arterial spin labelling. NeuroImage: Clinical. 3, pp. 301-310. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2013.09.004
AuthorsHodkinson, DJ, Krause, K, Khawaja, N, Renton, TF, Huggins, JP, Vennart, W, Thacker, M., Mehta, MA, Zelaya, FO, Williams, SCR and Howard, MA
Abstract

Arterial spin labelling (ASL) is increasingly being applied to study the cerebral response to pain in both experimental human models and patients with persistent pain. Despite its advantages, scanning time and reliability remain important issues in the clinical applicability of ASL. Here we present the test-retest analysis of concurrent pseudo-continuous ASL (pCASL) and visual analogue scale (VAS), in a clinical model of on-going pain following third molar extraction (TME). Using ICC performance measures, we were able to quantify the reliability of the post-surgical pain state and ΔCBF (change in CBF), both at the group and individual case level. Within-subject, the inter- and intra-session reliability of the post-surgical pain state was ranked good-to-excellent (ICC > 0.6) across both pCASL and VAS modalities. The parameter ΔCBF (change in CBF between pre- and post-surgical states) performed reliably (ICC > 0.4), provided that a single baseline condition (or the mean of more than one baseline) was used for subtraction. Between-subjects, the pCASL measurements in the post-surgical pain state and ΔCBF were both characterised as reliable (ICC > 0.4). However, the subjective VAS pain ratings demonstrated a significant contribution of pain state variability, which suggests diminished utility for interindividual comparisons. These analyses indicate that the pCASL imaging technique has considerable potential for the comparison of within- and between-subjects differences associated with pain-induced state changes and baseline differences in regional CBF. They also suggest that differences in baseline perfusion and functional lateralisation characteristics may play an important role in the overall reliability of the estimated changes in CBF. Repeated measures designs have the important advantage that they provide good reliability for comparing condition effects because all sources of variability between subjects are excluded from the experimental error. The ability to elicit reliable neural correlates of on-going pain using quantitative perfusion imaging may help support the conclusions derived from subjective self-report.

Year2013
JournalNeuroImage: Clinical
Journal citation3, pp. 301-310
ISSN2213-1582
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2013.09.004
Publication dates
Print16 Sep 2013
Publication process dates
Deposited25 Jun 2019
Accepted06 Sep 2013
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Open
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