NMR in biomedicine
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The macromolecular proton fraction (MPF) is a quantitative MRI parameter determining the magnetization transfer (MT) effect in tissues, and is defined as the relative amount of immobile macromolecular protons involved in magnetization exchange with mobile water protons. MPF has the potential to provide a quantitative assessment of fibrous tissue because of the intrinsically high MPF specific for collagen. The goal of this study was to investigate the relationship between histologically determined fibrosis stage and MPF in the liver parenchyma measured using a recently developed fast single-point clinically targeted MPF mapping method. ⋯ MPF and fibrosis scores were strongly positively correlated, with a Spearman's rank correlation coefficient of 0.80 (p < 0.001). This study demonstrates the feasibility of fast MPF mapping of the human liver in vivo and confirms the hypothesis that MPF is increased in hepatic fibrosis and associated with fibrosis stage. MPF may be useful as a non-invasive imaging biomarker of hepatic fibrosis.
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This study aims to identify the temporal kinetics of intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) MRI in patients with human papillomavirus-associated (HPV+) oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma. Patients were enrolled under an Institutional Review Board (IRB)-approved protocol as part of an ongoing prospective clinical trial. All patients underwent two MRI studies: a baseline scan before chemoradiotherapy and a mid-treatment scan 3-4 weeks after treatment initiation. ⋯ Each increase in normalized ΔADC of size 0.1 yielded a 1.45-fold increase in the odds of CR (p < 0.0003), each increase in normalized ΔD of size 0.1 yielded a 1.53-fold increase in the odds of CR (p < 0.0002), and each unit increase in Δf yielded a 2.29-fold increase in the odds of CR (p < 0.02). Combined ΔD and ΔADC were integrated into a multivariate prediction model and attained an AUC of 0.87 (95% confidence interval: 0.79, 0.96), as well as a sensitivity of 0.63, specificity of 0.85 and accuracy of 0.78, under leave-one-out cross-validation. In conclusion, IVIM is feasible and potentially useful in the prediction and assessment of the early response of HPV+ oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma to chemoradiotherapy.
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This study sought to demonstrate and evaluate a novel spectral fitting method to improve quantification accuracy in the presence of large magnetic field distortion, especially with high fields. MRS experiments were performed using a point-resolved spectroscopy (PRESS)-type sequence at 7 T. A double-echo gradient echo (GRE) sequence was used to acquire B0 maps following MRS experiments. ⋯ This article is a U. S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.
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One major challenge of MRSI is the poor signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), which can be improved by using a surface coil array. Here we propose to exploit the spatial sensitivity of different channels of a coil array to enforce the k-space data consistency (DC) in order to suppress noise and consequently to improve MRSI SNR. MRSI data were collected using a proton echo planar spectroscopic imaging (PEPSI) sequence at 3 T using a 32-channel coil array and were averaged with one, two and eight measurements (avg-1, avg-2 and avg-8). ⋯ According to the reported Cramer-Rao lower bounds, the improvement in metabolic fitting was significant (p < 0.01) when the DC constraint was applied with λ ≥ 2. Using the DC constraint with λ = 3 or 5 can minimize both root-mean-square errors and spatial variation for all subjects using the avg-8 data set as reference values. Our results suggest that MRSI reconstructed with a DC constraint can save around 70% of scanning time to obtain images and spectra with similar SNRs using λ = 5.
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The purpose of this study was to measure the regional change of magnetic susceptibility in human brain upon inhalation of 100% oxygen by MRI quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM). Fourteen healthy volunteers were scanned in a 3 T MR scanner with a 3D multi-gradient-echo sequence while breathing medical air (normoxia) and pure oxygen (hyperoxia). QSM images and R2* maps were calculated. ⋯ The susceptibility decrease in veins implied an increase of venous oxygen saturation (SvO2) by 10.1 ± 4.0%. Compared with QSM, R2* was more seriously affected by long-distance effects not related to local tissue oxygenation and increased in cerebral frontal regions (3 ± 2 s(-1), p < 0.0004) due to paramagnetic molecular oxygen in cavities. The results highlight the potential of QSM to yield region-specific quantitative oxygenation information, and, thus, for applications such as oxygen-therapy monitoring or identification of hypoxic tumor tissue during radiotherapy planning.