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Dive into the research topics where Xiaokui Mo is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiaokui Mo.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2016

Measuring age-dependent myocardial stiffness across the cardiac cycle using MR elastography: A reproducibility study

Peter A. Wassenaar; Chethanya N. Eleswarpu; Samuel Schroeder; Xiaokui Mo; Brian Raterman; Richard D. White; Arunark Kolipaka

To assess reproducibility in measuring left ventricular (LV) myocardial stiffness in volunteers throughout the cardiac cycle using MR elastography (MRE) and to determine its correlation with age.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2016

Quantification of aortic stiffness using magnetic resonance elastography: Measurement reproducibility, pulse wave velocity comparison, changes over cardiac cycle, and relationship with age.

William E. Kenyhercz; Brian Raterman; Venkata Sita Priyanka Illapani; Joshua D. Dowell; Xiaokui Mo; Richard D. White; Arunark Kolipaka

To assess MR elastography (MRE)‐derived aortic shear stiffness (μMRE) measurements for: 1) reproducibility, 2) comparison to pulse wave velocity, 3) changes over the cardiac cycle, and 4) relationship with age.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2017

In vivo quantification of myocardial stiffness in hypertensive porcine hearts using MR elastography

Ria Mazumder; Samuel Schroeder; Xiaokui Mo; Bradley D. Clymer; Richard D. White; Arunark Kolipaka

To determine alteration in left ventricular (LV) myocardial stiffness (MS) with hypertension (HTN). Cardiac MR elastography (MRE) was used to estimate MS in HTN induced pigs and MRE‐derived MS measurements were compared against LV pressure, thickness and circumferential strain.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2017

Quantification and comparison of 4D-flow MRI-derived wall shear stress and MRE-derived wall stiffness of the abdominal aorta.

Arunark Kolipaka; Venkata Sita Priyanka Illapani; Prateek Kalra; Julio Garcia; Xiaokui Mo; Michael Markl; Richard D. White

Aortic wall shear stress (WSSFlow) alters endothelial function, which in‐turn changes aortic wall stiffness leading to remodeling in different disease states. Therefore, the aims of this study are to determine normal physiologic correlations between: (1) Magnetic Resonance Elastography (MRE)‐derived aortic wall stiffness (WSMRE) and WSSFlow; (2) WSMRE and mean velocity; (3) WSMRE and pulse wave velocity (PWV);( 4) WSMRE and mean peak flow; and (5) WSMRE, WSSFlow and age using MRE and 4D‐flow MRI in the abdominal aorta in healthy human subjects.


Radiology | 2017

MR Elastography–derived Stiffness: A Biomarker for Intervertebral Disc Degeneration

Benjamin A. Walter; Prasath Mageswaran; Xiaokui Mo; Daniel J. Boulter; Hazem Mashaly; Xuan V. Nguyen; Luciano M. Prevedello; William Thoman; Brian Raterman; Prateek Kalra; Ehud Mendel; William S. Marras; Arunark Kolipaka

Purpose To determine the repeatability of magnetic resonance (MR) elastography-derived shear stiffness measurements of the intervertebral disc (IVD) taken throughout the day and their relationship with IVD degeneration and subject age. Materials and Methods In a cross-sectional study, in vivo lumbar MR elastography was performed once in the morning and once in the afternoon in 47 subjects without current low back pain (IVDs = 230; age range, 20-71 years) after obtaining written consent under approval of the institutional review board. The Pfirrmann degeneration grade and MR elastography-derived shear stiffness of the nucleus pulposus and annulus fibrosus regions of all lumbar IVDs were assessed by means of principal frequency analysis. One-way analysis of variance, paired t tests, concordance and Bland-Altman tests, and Pearson correlations were used to evaluate degeneration, diurnal changes, repeatability, and age effects, respectively. Results There were no significant differences between morning and afternoon shear stiffness across all levels and there was very good technical repeatability between the morning and afternoon imaging results for both nucleus pulposus (R = 0.92) and annulus fibrosus (R = 0.83) regions. There was a significant increase in both nucleus pulposus and annulus fibrosus MR elastography-derived shear stiffness with increasing Pfirrmann degeneration grade (nucleus pulposus grade 1, 12.5 kPa ± 1.3; grade 5, 16.5 kPa ± 2.1; annulus fibrosus grade 1, 90.4 kPa ± 9.3; grade 5, 120.1 kPa ± 15.4), and there were weak correlations between shear stiffness and age across all levels (R ≤ 0.32). Conclusion Our results demonstrate that MR elastography-derived shear stiffness measurements are highly repeatable, weakly correlate with age, and increase with advancing IVD degeneration. These results suggest that MR elastography-derived shear stiffness may provide an objective biomarker of the IVD degeneration process.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2017

In vivo magnetic resonance elastography to estimate left ventricular stiffness in a myocardial infarction induced porcine model

Ria Mazumder; Samuel Schroeder; Xiaokui Mo; Alan S. Litsky; Bradley D. Clymer; Richard D. White; Arunark Kolipaka

To estimate change in left ventricular (LV) end‐systolic and end‐diastolic myocardial stiffness (MS) in pigs induced with myocardial infarction (MI) with disease progression using cardiac magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) and to compare it against ex vivo mechanical testing, LV circumferential strain, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) relaxometry parameters (T1, T2, and extracellular volume fraction [ECV]).


Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2016

Quantification of myocardial stiffness using magnetic resonance elastography in right ventricular hypertrophy: initial feasibility in dogs

Juliana Serafim da Silveira; Brian A. Scansen; Peter A. Wassenaar; Brian Raterman; Chethan Eleswarpu; Ning Jin; Xiaokui Mo; Richard D. White; John D. Bonagura; Arunark Kolipaka

INTRODUCTION Myocardial stiffness is an important determinant of cardiac function and is currently invasively and indirectly assessed by catheter angiography. This study aims to demonstrate the feasibility of quantifying right ventricular (RV) stiffness noninvasively using cardiac magnetic resonance elastography (CMRE) in dogs with severe congenital pulmonary valve stenosis (PVS) causing RV hypertrophy, and compare it to remote myocardium in the left ventricle (LV). Additionally, correlations between stiffness and selected pathophysiologic indicators from transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging were explored. METHODS In-vivo CMRE was performed on nine dogs presenting severe congenital PVS using a 1.5T MRI scanner. T1-MOLLI, T2-prepared-bSSFP, gated-cine GRE-MRE and LGE (PSIR) sequences were used to acquire a basal short-axis slice. RV and LV-free-wall (FW) stiffness measurements were compared against each other and also correlated to ventricular mass, RV and LV FW thickness, T1 and T2 relaxation times, and extracellular volume fraction (ECV). Peak transpulmonary pressure gradient and myocardial strain were also acquired on eight dogs by TTE and correlated to RV-FW systolic stiffness. Potential correlations were evaluated by Spearmans rho (rs). RESULTS RV-FW stiffness was found to be significantly higher than the LV-FW stiffness both during end-systole (ES) (p=0.002) and end-diastole (ED) (p=0.029). Significant correlations were observed between RV-FW ES and LV-FW ED stiffness versus ECV (rs=0.75; p-value=0.05). Non-significant moderate correlations were found between LV-FW ES (rs=0.54) and RV-FW ED (rs=0.61) stiffness versus ECV. Furthermore, non-significant correlations were found between RV or LV-FW stiffness and the remaining variables (rs<0.54; p-value>0.05). CONCLUSION This study demonstrates the feasibility of determining RV stiffness. The positive correlations between stiffness and ECV might indicate some interdependence between stiffness and myocardial extracellular matrix alterations. However, further studies are warranted to validate our initial observations.


Clinical Imaging | 2018

Magnetic resonance elastography to estimate brain stiffness: Measurement reproducibility and its estimate in pseudotumor cerebri patients

Arunark Kolipaka; Peter A. Wassenaar; Sangmin Cha; Wael M. Marashdeh; Xiaokui Mo; Prateek Kalra; Bradley Gans; Brian Raterman; Eric C. Bourekas

This study determines the reproducibility of magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) derived brain stiffness in normal volunteers and compares it against pseudotumor patients before and after lumbar puncture (LP). MRE was performed on 10 normal volunteers for reproducibility and 14 pseudotumor patients before and after LP. During LP, opening and closing cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressures were recorded before and after removal of CSF and correlated to brain stiffness. Stiffness reproducibility was observed (r > 0.78; p < 0.008). Whole brain opening LP stiffness was significantly (p = 0.04) higher than normals, but no significant difference (p = 0.11) in closing LP measurements. No significant correlation was observed between opening and closing pressure and brain stiffness.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2017

In vivo quantification of aortic stiffness using MR elastography in hypertensive porcine model

Huiming Dong; Ria Mazumder; Venkata Sita Priyanka Illapani; Xiaokui Mo; Richard D. White; Arunark Kolipaka

Aortic stiffness plays an important role in evaluating and predicting the progression of systemic arterial hypertension (SAH). The aim of this study is to determine the stiffness of aortic wall using MR elastography (MRE) in a hypertensive porcine model and compare it against invasive aortic pressure measurements.


Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2017

Magnetic resonance elastography of the pancreas: Measurement reproducibility and relationship with age

Arunark Kolipaka; Samuel Schroeder; Xiaokui Mo; Zarine K. Shah; Phil A. Hart; Darwin L. Conwell

PURPOSE To determine magnetic resonance elastography (MRE)-derived stiffness of pancreas in healthy volunteers with emphasis on: 1) short term and midterm repeatability; and 2) variance as a function of age. METHODS Pancreatic MRE was performed on 22 healthy volunteers (age range:20-64years) in a 3T-scanner. For evaluation of reproducibility of stiffness estimates, the scans were repeated per volunteer on the same day (short term) and one month apart (midterm). MRE wave images were analyzed using 3D inversion to estimate the stiffness of overall pancreas and different anatomic regions (i.e., head, neck, body, and tail). Concordance and Spearman correlation tests were performed to determine reproducibility of stiffness measurements and relationship to age. RESULTS A strong concordance correlation (ρc=0.99; p-value<0.001) was found between short term and midterm repeatability pancreatic stiffness measurements. Additionally, the pancreatic stiffness significantly increased with age with good Spearman correlation coefficient (all ρ>0.81; p<0.001). The older age group (>45yrs) had significantly higher stiffness compared to the younger group (≤45yrs) (p<0.001). No significant difference (p>0.05) in stiffness measurements was observed between different anatomical regions of pancreas, except neck stiffness was slightly lower (p<0.012) compared to head and overall pancreas at month 1. CONCLUSION MRE-derived pancreatic stiffness measurements are highly reproducible in the short and midterm and increase linearly with age in healthy volunteers. Further studies are needed to examine these effects in patients with various pancreatic diseases to understand potential clinical applications.

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Arunark Kolipaka

The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center

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Brian Raterman

The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center

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Prateek Kalra

The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center

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