In vivo Na-23 MR imaging and spectroscopy of rat brain during TmDOTP5- infusion. |
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Authors: | N Bansal M J Germann I Lazar C R Malloy A D Sherry |
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Affiliation: | Mary Nell and Ralph B. Rogers Magnetic Resonance Center, Department of Radiology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas 75235-9085. |
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Abstract: | In vivo sodium-23 and hydrogen-1 magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and spectroscopy of the rat brain during infusion of the shift reagent thulium DOTP5- (1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetra[methylene phosphonate] was performed to assign the various peaks observed during infusion and to evaluate the shift reagent in discriminating tissue compartments. Na-23 spectra collected during the infusion showed two shifted peaks that were assigned to intravascular Na+ and extracellular muscle Na+, respectively, and one unshifted peak assigned to intra- and extracellular brain Na+ and cerebrospinal fluid Na+. These assignments were validated with H-1 and Na-23 MR imaging and Na-23 chemical shift imaging (CSI). The H-1 and Na-23 images showed that a surface coil placed on a rat head can detect a substantial amount of signal from muscle surrounding the skull. Na-23 CSI spectra from successive 1-mm-thick coronal sections indicated that the shift reagent did not cross the blood-brain barrier. The study also showed that bulk susceptibility shifts are quite small with Tm-DOTP5-. This reagent may be useful in determining compartmental Na+ concentrations and blood flow kinetics in brain and in examining the integrity of the blood-brain barrier. |
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Keywords: | Blood-brain barrier Brain, MR, 10.1214 Chemical shift imaging Magnetic resonance (MR), spectroscopy Shift reagent studies Sodium studies |
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