## Abstract T~1~, T~2~, and magnetization transfer (MT) measurements were performed in vitro at 3 T and 37Β°C on a variety of tissues: mouse liver, muscle, and heart; rat spinal cord and kidney; bovine optic nerve, cartilage, and white and gray matter; and human blood. The MR parameters were compare
Magnetization Transfer and T2 Relaxation Components in Tissue
β Scribed by Rodney Harrison; Michael J. Bronskill; R. Mark Henkelman
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 768 KB
- Volume
- 33
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
T2 relaxation makes an important contribution to tissue contrast in magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Many tissues are known to exhibit multicomponent T2 relaxation that suggests some compartmental segregation of mobile protons on a T2 timescale. Magnetization transfer (MT) is another relaxation mechanism that can be used to produce tissue contrast in MR imaging. The MT process depends strongly on water-macromolecular interactions. To investigate the relationship between multicomponent T2 relaxation and the MT process, multiecho T2 measurements have been combined with MT measurements for freshly excised samples of cardiac muscle, striated muscle, and white matter. For muscle, short T2 components show greater MT than long T2 components, consistent with the belief that they represent distinct water environments. For white matter, quantitative MT measurements were identical for the two major T2 components, apparently because of exchange between the T2 compartments on a timescale characteristic of the MT experiment. Implications for accurate modeling of MT in tissue and the use of MT for MR image contrast are discussed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this study the exchange between 'H magnetization in "free" water ( 'Hf) and that in a pool with restricted motion (' H,) was observed in tissues in vivo using NMR saturation transfer methods. Exchange between these two pools was demonstrated by a decrease in the steady-state magnetization and rel
## Abstract Protein in water solution increases magnetic relaxation rates of solvent nuclei to an extent that depends on magnetic field strength and molecular weight. Koenig and Schillinger (__J. Biol. Chem.__ 244, 3283 (1969)) showed that a small fraction of the water molecules in the first hydrat
## Abstract ## Purpose To use magnetization transfer (MT) imaging in the visualization of healthy articular cartilage and cartilage repair tissue after different cartilage repair procedures, and to assess global as well as zonal values and compare the results to T2βrelaxation. ## Materials and Me