Results are presented from an in vivo study of human skin in which a zig-zag surface coil together with a threepulse Fourier Series Window (FSW) protocol have been used to obtain minimally contaminated 31P skin spectra of the posterior calf. Phantom experiments indicate that while the fall-off in th
Use of the Fourier Series Window Protocol with a Zig-Zag Surface Coil in 31P NMR Human Skin Spectroscopy. A Theoretical Study
โ Scribed by Mark E. Bastin; Alistair G. Cowie; David N. Manners; Linda J. Hands; Peter Styles
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 811 KB
- Volume
- 9
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0952-3480
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โฆ Synopsis
The use of a zig-zag surface coil with a three-pulse Fourier Series Window (FSW) has been suggested as a means by which in vivo NMR spectroscopic studies of human skin can be performed. Using direct numerical simulations of the magnetic field profile of a 10 limb zig-zag surface coil, the role of the FSW in reducing NMR signals originating from the deeper skeletal muscle layers is examined theoretically, The extent of muscle signal contamination is determined for different coil inter-limb spacings and pulse width settings. The optimum interlimb spacing for studying living human skin, that which minimizes signal contamination and maximizes skin signal collected, is shown to be between 4 and 6 mm. These calculations demonstrate that the FSW and zig-zag surface coil offer a protocol for investigating the metabolism of large areas of surface tissue while keeping signal contamination from the deeper skeletal muscle layers down to an acceptable level.
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