Osmotic effects on the T2 relaxation decay of in vivo muscle. |
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Authors: | G Gambarota B E Cairns C B Berde R V Mulkern |
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Affiliation: | Department of Physics, Boston College, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. |
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Abstract: | Saline solutions are commonly employed as a vehicle for drugs administered intramuscularly. In this study, in vivo measurements of spin-spin relaxation (T2) processes by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were performed to investigate the distribution of water in rat masseter muscle tissue after intramuscular injection of saline solutions of varying tonicity. Prior to saline injection, image-based T2 relaxation decay of muscle was monoexponential. After injection of saline, the T2 relaxation decay became multiexponential. Non-negative least squares (NNLS) analysis of the decay curves revealed two relaxation components: a fast component (T2 = 20-40 ms) and a slow component (T2 = 150-400 ms), which are assigned to intra- and extracellular water protons, respectively. Injection of hypertonic saline solutions significantly increased the extracellular water component in muscle tissue compared to isotonic saline solutions, an effect which lasted for more than 60 min. These findings suggest that MRI techniques may be useful to investigate the effect of hyper- or hypotonic solutions on muscle tissue in vivo. |
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Keywords: | water compartmentation masseter muscle in vivo relaxometry saline osmotic response |
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