In an article in a previous issue of the Journal of Magnetic Resonance, Ouwerkerk and Bottomley (J. Magn. Reson. 148, pp. 425--435, 2001) show that even in the presence of chemical exchange, the dependence of saturation factors on repetition time in the one-pulse experiment is approximately monoexpo
On Neglecting Chemical Exchange When Correcting in Vivo31P MRS Data for Partial Saturation: Commentary on: “Pitfalls in the Measurement of Metabolite Concentrations Using the One-Pulse Experiment in in Vivo NMR”
✍ Scribed by Ronald Ouwerkerk; Paul A. Bottomley
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 154 KB
- Volume
- 149
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1090-7807
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✦ Synopsis
This article replies to Spencer et al. (J. Magn. Reson. 149, 251--257, 2001) concerning the degree to which chemical exchange affects partial saturation corrections using saturation factors. Considering the important case of in vivo (31)P NMR, we employ differential analysis to demonstrate a broad range of experimental conditions over which chemical exchange minimally affects saturation factors, and near-optimum signal-to-noise ratio is preserved. The analysis contradicts Spencer et al.'s broad claim that chemical exchange results in a strong dependence of saturation factors upon M(0)'s and T(1) and exchange parameters. For Spencer et al.'s example of a dynamic (31)P NMR experiment in which phosphocreatine varies 20-fold, we show that our strategy of measuring saturation factors at the start and end of the study reduces errors in saturation corrections to 2% for the high-energy phosphates.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
A fundamental problem in Fourier transform NMR spectroscopy is the calculation of observed resonance amplitudes for a repetitively pulsed sample, as first analyzed by Ernst and Anderson in 1966. Applications include determination of spin-lattice relaxation times (T 1 's) by progressive saturation an