A command line tool for quantification of perfusion from ASL data
oxford_asl
is part of the BASIL toolbox within FSL for the analysis of
perfusion ASL data. oxford_asl
provides a single means to quantify CBF from ASL
data, including kinetic-model inversion, absolute quantification via a
calibration image and registration of the data. It provides most of the common
options that someone who has raw ASL data might like to perform to extract
perfusion images and thus is the normal place to begin for most users who want
a command line tool.
oxford_asl
is the main underlying tool behind the
equivalent graphical user interface: Asl_gui
. To use oxford_asl
you may find
you first need to pre-process your data using asl_file
(see the tutorial for
examples where this is relevant). More advanced users wishing to do customised
kinetic analysis might want to use the basil command line tool - this is the
very core of oxford_asl
and thus the BASIL
toolbox overall.
For full documentation on the oxford_asl
suite of tools see:
https://asl-docs.readthedocs.io/
If you use oxford_asl in your research, please reference the article below, plus any others that specifically relate to the analysis you have performed:
Chappell MA, Groves AR, Whitcher B, Woolrich MW. Variational Bayesian inference for a non-linear forward model. IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing 57(1):223-236, 2009.
If you employ spatial priors you should ideally reference this article too.
A.R. Groves, M.A. Chappell, M.W. Woolrich, Combined Spatial and Non-Spatial Prior for Inference on MRI Time-Series , NeuroImage 45(3) 795-809, 2009.
If you fit the macrovascular (arterial) contribution you should reference this article too.
Chappell MA, MacIntosh BJ, Donahue MJ, Gunther M, Jezzard P, Woolrich MW. Separation of Intravascular Signal in Multi-Inversion Time Arterial Spin Labelling MRI. Magn Reson Med 63(5):1357-1365, 2010.
If you employ the partial volume correction method then you should reference this article too.
Chappell MA, MacIntosh BJ, Donahue MJ,Jezzard P, Woolrich MW. Partial volume correction of multiple inversion time arterial spin labeling MRI data, Magn Reson Med, 65(4):1173-1183, 2011.
If you perform model-based analysis of QUASAR ASL data then you should reference this article too.
Chappell, M. A., Woolrich, M. W., Petersen, E. T., Golay, X., & Payne, S. J. (2012). Comparing model-based and model-free analysis methods for QUASAR arterial spin labeling perfusion quantification. doi:10.1002/mrm.24372