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Correlation of R2 with total iron concentration in the brains of rhesus monkeys

✍ Scribed by Peter A. Hardy; Don Gash; Robert Yokel; Anders Andersen; Yi Ai; Zhiming Zhang


Book ID
102907713
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
799 KB
Volume
21
Category
Article
ISSN
1053-1807

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Purpose

To estimate the relationship between R~2~ = 1/T~2~ as measured with a double echo spin echo sequence and total iron concentration in gray matter structures in the brains of aging rhesus monkeys.

Materials and Methods

Using a 1.5‐T magnetic resonance (MR) imager, we collected double echo spin echo images of the brains of 12 female rhesus monkeys aged between 9 and 23 years. From the double echo images, the transverse relaxation rate R~2~ = 1/T~2~ was calculated in selected gray matter regions. After the animals were euthanized, their brains were excised and tissue punches were taken of the substantia nigra, globus pallidus, and gray matter regions of the cerebellum. Some of the tissue punches were assayed for total iron using atomic absorption spectroscopy.

Results

The range of tissue iron concentration spanned from 15 to 450 ΞΌg/g wet weight, with the highest levels in the globus pallidus and the lowest levels in the cerebellum. The results show that R~2~ was highly correlated with the total iron concentration and that the relationship between R~2~ and tissue iron concentration appeared to depend upon the iron concentration. For concentrations above approximately 150 ΞΌg/g wet weight, R~2~ increased with a sensitivity of 0.0484 Β± 0.0023 second^βˆ’1^(ΞΌg/g)^βˆ’1^. In contrast, where the iron concentration was below 150 ΞΌg/g, R~2~ increased at 0.0013 Β± 0.0073 second^βˆ’1^(ΞΌg/g)^βˆ’1^. The bilinear behavior may reflect changes with age in the relative amounts of iron distributed diffusely and in granular form in the globus pallidus and substantia nigra. Histological sections of the tissues stained for iron and ferritin support this hypothesis and indicate that the distribution of ferritin is similar to the distribution of iron.

Conclusion

This study reaffirms the value of measuring the MR relaxation rate R~2~ for a noninvasive estimate of iron content in the brain and identified limitations in the relationship at low tissue iron concentrations. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2005;21:118–127. Β© 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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