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Controlling diffusion of 3He by buffer gases: A structural contrast agent in lung MRI

✍ Scribed by Rodolfo H. Acosta; Peter Blümler; Luis Agulles-Pedrós; Andreas E. Morbach; Jörg Schmiedeskamp; Annette Herweling; Ursula Wolf; Alexander Scholz; Wolfgang G. Schreiber; Werner Heil; Manfred Thelen; Hans-Wolfgang Spiess


Book ID
102375309
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
387 KB
Volume
24
Category
Article
ISSN
1053-1807

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Purpose

To study the influence of admixing inert buffer gases to laser‐polarized ^3^He in terms of resulting diffusion coefficients and the consequences for image contrast and resolution.

Materials and Methods

The diffusion coefficient of ^3^He was altered by admixing buffer gases of various molecular weights (^4^He, N~2~, and SF~6~). The influence of the pulse sequence and the diffusion coefficient on the appearance of MRI of (laser‐polarized) gases was analyzed by comparison of basic theoretical concepts with demonstrative experiments.

Results

Excellent agreement between theoretical description and observed signal in simple gradient echoes was observed. A maximum signal gain can be predicted and was experimentally validated. Images acquired under such conditions revealed improved resolution. The nature and concentration of the admixed gas defines a structural threshold for the observed apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) as demonstrated with diffusion‐weighted MRI on a pig's lung flooded with suitable gas mixtures.

Conclusion

A novel procedure is proposed to control the diffusion coefficient of gases in MRI by admixture of inert buffer gases. Their molecular mass and concentration enter as additional parameters into the equations that describe structural contrast. This allows for setting a structural threshold up to which structures contribute to the image. For MRI of the lung this enables images of very small structural elements (alveoli) only, or in the other extreme, all airways can be displayed with minimal signal loss due to diffusion. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2006. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.