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Research ArticleSpine Imaging and Spine Image-Guided Interventions

Super-Resolution in Clinically Available Spinal Cord MRIs Enables Automated Atrophy Analysis

Blake E. Dewey, Samuel W. Remedios, Muraleetharan Sanjayan, Nicole Bou Rjeily, Alexandra Zambriczki Lee, Chelsea Wyche, Safiya Duncan, Jerry L. Prince, Peter A. Calabresi, Kathryn C. Fitzgerald and Ellen M. Mowry
American Journal of Neuroradiology April 2025, 46 (4) 823-831; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A8526
Blake E. Dewey
aFrom the Department of Neurology (B.E.D., M.S., N.B.R., A.Z.L., C.W., S.D., P.A.C., K.C.F., E.M.M.), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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  • ORCID record for Blake E. Dewey
Samuel W. Remedios
bDepartment of Computer Science (S.W.R.), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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Muraleetharan Sanjayan
aFrom the Department of Neurology (B.E.D., M.S., N.B.R., A.Z.L., C.W., S.D., P.A.C., K.C.F., E.M.M.), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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Nicole Bou Rjeily
aFrom the Department of Neurology (B.E.D., M.S., N.B.R., A.Z.L., C.W., S.D., P.A.C., K.C.F., E.M.M.), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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Alexandra Zambriczki Lee
aFrom the Department of Neurology (B.E.D., M.S., N.B.R., A.Z.L., C.W., S.D., P.A.C., K.C.F., E.M.M.), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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Chelsea Wyche
aFrom the Department of Neurology (B.E.D., M.S., N.B.R., A.Z.L., C.W., S.D., P.A.C., K.C.F., E.M.M.), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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Safiya Duncan
aFrom the Department of Neurology (B.E.D., M.S., N.B.R., A.Z.L., C.W., S.D., P.A.C., K.C.F., E.M.M.), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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Jerry L. Prince
cDepartment of Electrical and Computer Engineering (J.L.P.), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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Peter A. Calabresi
aFrom the Department of Neurology (B.E.D., M.S., N.B.R., A.Z.L., C.W., S.D., P.A.C., K.C.F., E.M.M.), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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Kathryn C. Fitzgerald
aFrom the Department of Neurology (B.E.D., M.S., N.B.R., A.Z.L., C.W., S.D., P.A.C., K.C.F., E.M.M.), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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Ellen M. Mowry
aFrom the Department of Neurology (B.E.D., M.S., N.B.R., A.Z.L., C.W., S.D., P.A.C., K.C.F., E.M.M.), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Measurement of the mean upper cervical cord area (MUCCA) is an important biomarker in the study of neurodegeneration. However, dedicated high-resolution (HR) scans of the cervical spinal cord are rare in standard-of-care imaging due to timing and clinical usability. Most clinical cervical spinal cord imaging is sagittally acquired in 2D with thick slices and anisotropic voxels. As a solution, previous work describes HR T1-weighted brain imaging for measuring the upper cord area, but this is still not common in clinical care.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: We propose using a zero-shot super-resolution technique, synthetic multi-orientation resolution enhancement (SMORE), already validated in the brain, to enhance the resolution of 2D-acquired scans for upper cord area calculations. To incorporate super-resolution in spinal cord analysis, we validate SMORE against HR research imaging and in a real-world longitudinal data analysis.

RESULTS: Super-resolved (SR) images reconstructed by using SMORE showed significantly greater similarity to the ground truth than low-resolution (LR) images across all tested resolutions (P < .001 for all resolutions in peak signal-to-noise ratio [PSNR] and mean structural similarity [MSSIM]). MUCCA results from SR scans demonstrate excellent correlation with HR scans (r > 0.973 for all resolutions) compared with LR scans. Additionally, SR scans are consistent between resolutions (r > 0.969), an essential factor in longitudinal analysis. Compared with clinical outcomes such as walking speed or disease severity, MUCCA values from LR scans have significantly lower correlations than those from HR scans. SR results have no significant difference. In a longitudinal real-world data set, we show that these SR volumes can be used in conjunction with T1-weighted brain scans to show a significant rate of atrophy (−0.790, P = .020 versus −0.438, P = .301 with LR).

CONCLUSIONS: Super-resolution is a valuable tool for enabling large-scale studies of cord atrophy, as LR images acquired in clinical practice are common and available.

ABBREVIATIONS:

9HPT
9-hole peg test
CSC
cervical spinal cord
EDSS
Expanded Disability Status Scale
HR
high-resolution
LR
low-resolution
MSFC
MS functional composite
MSSIM
mean structural similarity
MUCCA
mean upper cervical cord area
PMJ
pontomedullary junction
PSNR
peak signal-to-noise ratio
SMORE
synthetic multi-orientation resolution enhancement
SR
super-resolved
T25FW
timed 25-foot walk
  • © 2025 by American Journal of Neuroradiology
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American Journal of Neuroradiology: 46 (4)
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Cite this article
Blake E. Dewey, Samuel W. Remedios, Muraleetharan Sanjayan, Nicole Bou Rjeily, Alexandra Zambriczki Lee, Chelsea Wyche, Safiya Duncan, Jerry L. Prince, Peter A. Calabresi, Kathryn C. Fitzgerald, Ellen M. Mowry
Super-Resolution in Clinically Available Spinal Cord MRIs Enables Automated Atrophy Analysis
American Journal of Neuroradiology Apr 2025, 46 (4) 823-831; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A8526

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Super-Resolution MRI for Spinal Cord Atrophy
Blake E. Dewey, Samuel W. Remedios, Muraleetharan Sanjayan, Nicole Bou Rjeily, Alexandra Zambriczki Lee, Chelsea Wyche, Safiya Duncan, Jerry L. Prince, Peter A. Calabresi, Kathryn C. Fitzgerald, Ellen M. Mowry
American Journal of Neuroradiology Apr 2025, 46 (4) 823-831; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A8526
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