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Correlation of proton transverse relaxation rates (R2) with iron concentrations in postmortem brain tissue from alzheimer's disease patients

โœ Scribed by Michael J. House; Timothy G. St. Pierre; Kris V. Kowdley; Thomas Montine; James Connor; John Beard; Jose Berger; Narendra Siddaiah; Eric Shankland; Lee-Way Jin


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
234 KB
Volume
57
Category
Article
ISSN
0740-3194

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โœฆ Synopsis


Iron accumulates in the

Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain and is directly associated with โค-amyloid pathology. The proton transverse relaxation rate (R 2 ) has a strong linear relationship with iron concentrations in healthy brain tissue; however, an independent test of this relationship has not been extended to AD brain tissue. In this study in vitro single spin-echo (SE) measurements were made on tissue samples from four human AD brains using a 4.7T MRI research scanner. R 2 values were calculated for 14 cortical and subcortical gray matter (GM) and white matter (WM) regions. Atomic absorption spectroscopy was used to measure iron concentrations in the corresponding excised brain regions. Significant positive linear correlations were observed between R 2 values and iron concentrations in GM regions assessed across individual tissue samples and data averaged by brain region. With the use of a predictive model for R 2 , a threshold iron concentration of 55 g Fe/g wet tissue was determined above which R 2 appears to be dominated by the affects of iron in AD brain tissue. High-field MRI may therefore be a useful research tool for assessing brain iron changes associated with AD. Magn Reson Med 57:172-180, 2007.


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1.4T study of proton magnetic relaxation
โœ Michael J. House; Timothy G. St. Pierre; Catriona McLean ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2008 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 270 KB

## Abstract We measured proton magnetic longitudinal (__R__~1~) and transverse (__R__~2~) relaxation rates at 1.4T, iron concentrations, water contents, and amyloid plaque densities in postmortem brain tissue samples from three Alzheimer's disease (AD), two possible AD, and five control subjects. I