MRI has become an important tool to noninvasively assess global and regional cardiac function, infarct size, or myocardial blood flow in surgically or genetically modified mouse models of human heart disease. Constraints on scan time due to sensitivity to general anesthesia in hemodynamically compro
BOLD imaging in the mouse brain using a turboCRAZED sequence at high magnetic fields
✍ Scribed by Johannes T. Schneider; Cornelius Faber
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 737 KB
- Volume
- 60
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Functional MRI (fMRI) based on the detection of intermolecular double‐quantum coherences (iDQC) has previously been shown to provide pronounced activation signal. For fMRI in small animals at very high magnetic fields, the essential fast gradient echo‐based readout methods become problematic. Here, rapid intermolecular double‐quantum coherence (iDQC) imaging was implemented, combining the iDQC preparation sequence with a Turbo spin echo‐like readout. Four‐step phase cycling and a novel intensity‐ordered k‐space encoding scheme with separate acquisition of odd and even echoes were essential to optimize signal to noise ratio efficiency. Compared with a single echo readout of iDQC signal, acceleration of factor 16 was achieved in phantoms using the novel method at 17.6 Tesla. In vivo, echo trains consisting of 32 echoes were possible and images of the mouse brain were obtained in 30 s. The blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) effect in the mouse brain upon change of breathing gas was observed as average signal change of (6.3 ± 1.1)% in iDQC images. Signal changes in conventional multi spin echo images were (4.4 ± 2.3)% and (8.3 ± 3.8)% with gradient echo methods. Combination of T~2~*‐weighting with the fast iDQC sequence may yield higher signal changes than with either method alone, and establish fast iDQC imaging a robust tool for high field fMRI in small animals. Magn Reson Med 60:850–859, 2008. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract ## Purpose: To compare two magnetic resonance (MR) contrast mechanisms, __R__\*~2~ BOLD and balanced SSFP, for the dynamic monitoring of the cerebral response to (C)O~2~ respiratory challenges. ## Materials and Methods: Carbogen and CO~2~‐enriched air were delivered to 9 healthy volu
## Abstract Proton magnetization transfer contrast (MTC) imaging, using continuous wave off‐resonance irradiation, was performed on the rat brain __in vivo__ at 4.7 Tesla. The observed MTC was studied in three different brain regions: the __corpus callosum__, the basal ganglia, and the temporal lob