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Perfusion changes in human skeletal muscle during reactive hyperemia measured by echo-planar imaging

✍ Scribed by Jean-François Toussaint; Kenneth K. Kwong; Fidelis M′Kparu; Robert M. Weisskoff; Paul J. Laraia; Howard L. Kantor


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
791 KB
Volume
35
Category
Article
ISSN
0740-3194

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Muscle performance is markedly influenced by tissue perfu‐sion. Techniques that allow quantification of microvascular flow are limited by the use of ionizing radiation. In this investigation, we apply an NMR model previously developed by Detre ef al. to the measurement of human muscle perfusion during reactive hyperemia. We compare our results with conventional plethysmography adapted to NMR. Using echo‐planar imaging, T~1~ and T~2~ were measured in 14 subjects during rest, ischemia, and reactive hyperemia. Mean leg muscle T~1~ in healthy volunteers is 850 ms at rest and 834 ms at reperfusion, leading to a calculated reactive hyperemia flow increase (T~1~ flow) of 103 ± 40 ml/100 ml/min. T~1~ flows correlate well with NMR‐plethysmography values. Changes in T~2~, which are sensitive to both deoxyhemoglobin content and vessel diameter variations, are also correlated with perfusion measurements. T~1~ changes allow quantification of regional perfusion in human muscle during reactive hyperemia.


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## Abstract Mechanisms generating BOLD contrast are complex and depend on parameters that are prone to large variations, in particular in skeletal muscle. Here, we simultaneously measured perfusion by ASL, and BOLD response in the calf muscle of 6 healthy volunteers during post‐ischemic reactive hy