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Proton MR spectroscopic imaging of rhesus macaque brain in vivo at 7T

✍ Scribed by Oded Gonen; Songtao Liu; Gadi Goelman; Eva-Maria Ratai; Sarah Pilkenton; Margaret R. Lentz; R. Gilberto González


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
811 KB
Volume
59
Category
Article
ISSN
0740-3194

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Due to the overall similarity of their brains' structure and physiology to its human counterpart, nonhuman primates provide excellent model systems for the pathogenesis of neurological diseases and their response to treatments. Its much smaller size, 80 versus 1250 cm^3^, however, requires proportionally higher spatial resolution to study, nondestructively, as many analogous regions as efficiently as possible in anesthetized animals. The confluence of these requirements underscores the need for the highest sensitivity, spatial coverage, resolution, and exam speed. Accordingly, we demonstrate the feasibility of 3D multi‐voxel, proton (^1^H) MRSI at (0.375 cm)^3^ = 0.05 cm^3^ isotropic spatial resolution over 21 cm^3^ (≈25%) of the anesthetized rhesus macaques brain at 7T in 25 min. These voxels are ×10^2^–10^1^ times smaller than the 8–1 cm^3^ common to ^1^H‐MRS in humans, retaining similar proportions between the macaque and human brain. The spectra showed a signal‐to‐noise‐ratio (SNR) ≈9–10 for the major metabolites and the interanimal SNR spatial distribution reproducibility was in the ±10% range for the standard error of their means (SEMs). Their metabolites' linewidths, 9 ± 2 Hz, yield excellent spectral resolution as well. These results indicate that 3D ^1^H‐MRSI can be integrated into comprehensive MR studies in primates at such high fields. Magn Reson Med, 2008. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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