Home About us Contact | |||
Magnetic Susceptibility Effects (magnetic + susceptibility_effects)
Selected AbstractsHigh-throughput screening of chemical exchange saturation transfer MR contrast agentsCONTRAST MEDIA & MOLECULAR IMAGING, Issue 3 2010Guanshu Liu Abstract A new high-throughput MRI method for screening chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) agents is demonstrated, allowing simultaneous testing of multiple samples with minimal attention to sample configuration and shimming of the main magnetic field (B0). This approach, which is applicable to diamagnetic, paramagnetic and liposome CEST agents, employs a set of inexpensive glass or plastic capillary tubes containing CEST agents put together in a cheap plastic tube holder, without the need for liquid between the tubes to reduce magnetic susceptibility effects. In this setup, a reference image of direct water saturation spectra is acquired in order to map the absolute water frequency for each volume element (voxel) in the sample image, followed by an image of saturation transfer spectra to determine the CEST properties. Even though the field over the total sample is very inhomogeneous due to air,tube interfaces, the shape of the direct saturation spectra is not affected, allowing removal of susceptibility shift effects from the CEST data by using the absolute water frequencies from the reference map. As a result, quantitative information such as the mean CEST intensity for each sample can be extracted for multiple CEST agents at once. As an initial application, we demonstrate rapid screening of a library of 16 polypeptides for their CEST properties, but in principle the number of tubes is limited only by the available signal-noise-ratio, field of view and gradient strength for imaging. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] White-marker imaging,Separating magnetic susceptibility effects from partial volume effectsMAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE, Issue 3 2007Jan-Henry Seppenwoolde Abstract By applying dephasing gradients, local magnetic field inhomogeneitiescan selectively visualized with positive contrast, such as those created by magnetically labeled cells. This is known as "white-marker imaging." In white-marker imaging, subvoxel signal variations are also visualized as a result of partial volume (PV) effects and may compromise the identification of magnetic structures (e.g., magnetically-labeled cells). This study presents the theory and proof-of-principle experiments of a strategy to eliminate PV effects during white-marker imaging. The strategy employs the asymmetry of the signal response curves for non-PV effects as a function of externally applied gradients. In the case of PV effects, subtraction of the symmetrical signal responses eliminates their contribution. In vitro experimental images were made using a spherical phantom with cylindrical elements. In vivo images of the brain were obtained at a location that included air cavities (susceptibility effects) and the circle of Willis (PV effect). The results show that PV effects were eliminated in the in vitro experiments and were virtually absent under in vivo conditions. Magn Reson Med, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Role of proton MR for the study of muscle lipid metabolism,NMR IN BIOMEDICINE, Issue 7 2006Chris Boesch Abstract 1H-MR spectroscopy (MRS) of intramyocellular lipids (IMCL) became particularly important when it was recognized that IMCL levels are related to insulin sensitivity. While this relation is rather complex and depends on the training status of the subjects, various other influences such as exercise and diet also influence IMCL concentrations. This may open insight into many metabolic interactions; however, it also requires careful planning of studies in order to control all these confounding influences. This review summarizes various historical, methodological, and practical aspects of 1H-MR spectroscopy (MRS) of muscular lipids. That includes a differentiation of bulk magnetic susceptibility effects and residual dipolar coupling that can both be observed in MRS of skeletal muscle, yet affecting different metabolites in a specific way. Fitting of the intra- (IMCL) and extramyocellular (EMCL) signals with complex line shapes and the transformation into absolute concentrations is discussed. Since the determination of IMCL in muscle groups with oblique fiber orientation or in obese subjects is still difficult, potential improvement with high-resolution spectroscopic imaging or at higher field strength is considered. Fat selective imaging is presented as a possible alternative to MRS and the potential of multinuclear MRS is discussed. 1H-MRS of muscle lipids allows non-invasive and repeated studies of muscle metabolism that lead to highly relevant findings in clinics and patho-physiology. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Paramagnetic Liposomes as Innovative Contrast Agents for Magnetic Resonance (MR) Molecular Imaging ApplicationsCHEMISTRY & BIODIVERSITY, Issue 10 2008Enzo Terreno Abstract This article illustrates some innovative applications of liposomes loaded with paramagnetic lanthanide-based complexes in MR molecular imaging field. When a relatively high amount of a GdIII chelate is encapsulated in the vesicle, the nanosystem can simultaneously affect both the longitudinal (R1) and the transverse (R2) relaxation rate of the bulk H2O H-atoms, and this finding can be exploited to design improved thermosensitive liposomes whose MRI response is not longer dependent on the concentration of the probe. The observation that the liposome compartmentalization of a paramagnetic LnIII complex induce a significant R2 enhancement, primarily caused by magnetic susceptibility effects, prompted us to test the potential of such agents in cell-targeting MR experiments. The results obtained indicated that these nanoprobes may have a great potential for the MR visualization of cellular targets (like the glutamine membrane transporters) overexpressing in tumor cells. Liposomes loaded with paramagnetic complexes acting as NMR shift reagents have been recently proposed as highly sensitive CEST MRI agents. The main peculiarity of CEST probes is to allow the MR visualization of different agents present in the same region of interest, and this article provides an illustrative example of the in vivo potential of liposome-based CEST agents. [source] |