Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

MRI signal void due to in-plane motion is all-or-none

The process of MRI signal attenuation due to in-plane intravoxel velocity inhomogeneity is described. Given rigid rotation or linear shear, velocity phase-sensitivity will induce a phase distribution that varies linearly with position, which is exactly equivalent to the effect of a spatial phase encoding gradient pulse. It follows that the effect of such motion on the raw MRI signal is to displace it a fixed distance in kappa-space. Attenuation becomes marked when the center of the spin-echo reaches an edge of kappa-space, which happens when intravoxel phase shifts reach pi radian/voxel.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Magn Reson Med

Motionless movies of myocardial strain-rates using stimulated echoes

We present methods to acquire and analyze NMR movies of myocardial strain rates in which cardiac motion is suppressed and the histories of strain rates are accurately defined for each voxel of myocardial tissue. By means of stimulated echoes, the myocardial strain-rate tensor is phase-encoded at progressive delays in the cardiac cycle while the slice-select and spatial encoding of the image acquisition are performed at a constant cardiac delay. In these data, every image shows the identical myocardial tissue, and the anatomic configuration of the heart appears motionless.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Magn Reson Med

Multi-area visuotopic map complexes in macaque striate and extra-striate cortex

We propose that a simple, closed-form mathematical expression-the Wedge-Dipole mapping-provides a concise approximation to the full-field, two-dimensional topographic structure of macaque V1, V2, and V3. A single map function, which we term a map complex, acts as a simultaneous descriptor of all three areas. Quantitative estimation of the Wedge-Dipole parameters is provided via 2DG data of central-field V1 topography and a publicly available data set of full-field macaque V1 and V2 topography. Good quantitative agreement is obtained between the data and the model presented here.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Vision Res

Fast brain matching with spectral correspondence

Brain matching is an important problem in neuroimaging studies. Current surface-based methods for cortex matching and atlasing, although quite accurate, can require long computation times. Here we propose an approach based on spectral correspondence, where spectra of graphs derived from the surface model meshes are matched. Cerebral cortex matching problems can thus benefit from the tremendous speed advantage of spectral methods, which are able to calculate a cortex matching in seconds rather than hours.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Inf Process Med Imaging

Dynamic and static contributions of the cerebrovasculature to the resting-state BOLD signal

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in the resting state, particularly fMRI based on the blood-oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal, has been extensively used to measure functional connectivity in the brain. However, the mechanisms of vascular regulation that underlie the BOLD fluctuations during rest are still poorly understood.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Neuroimage

Large production system for hyperpolarized 129Xe for human lung imaging studies

RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: Hyperpolarized gases such as (129)Xe and (3)He have high potential as imaging agents for functional lung magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We present new technology offering (129)Xe production rates with order-of-magnitude improvement over existing systems, to liter per hour at 50% polarization. Human lung imaging studies with xenon, initially limited by the modest quantity and quality of hyperpolarized gas available, can now be performed with multiliter quantities several times daily.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Acad Radiol

Hyperpolarized (129)Xe MRI: a viable functional lung imaging modality?

The majority of researchers investigating hyperpolarized gas MRI as a candidate functional lung imaging modality have used (3)He as their imaging agent of choice rather than (129)Xe. This preference has been predominantly due to, (3)He providing stronger signals due to higher levels of polarization and higher gyromagnetic ratio, as well as its being easily available to more researchers due to availability of polarizers (USA) or ease of gas transport (Europe).

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Eur J Radiol

Hyperpolarized gas MR Imaging of the lung: current status as a research tool

Hyperpolarized gas magnetic resonance imaging has been explored extensively as a promising tool for the quantitative evaluation of regional pulmonary pathophysiology. This noninvasive technique is capable of providing both structural information down to the level of the alveolar microstructure and functional information, such as dynamic ventilation, intrapulmonary partial pressure of oxygen, and alveolar surface area. This study reviews the role of hyperpolarized 3-helium and 129-xenon magnetic resonance imaging in this research.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Thorac Imaging

Human pulmonary imaging and spectroscopy with hyperpolarized 129Xe at 0.2T

RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: Using a novel (129)Xe polarizer with high throughput (1-2 L/hour) and high polarization (approximately 55%), our objective was to demonstrate and characterize human pulmonary applications at 0.2T. Specifically, we investigated the ability of (129)Xe to measure the alveolar surface area per unit volume of gas, S(A)/V(gas).

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Acad Radiol

Inhalation heterogeneity from subresidual volumes in elite divers

Punctate reopening of the lung from subresidual volumes (sub-RV) is commonly observed in excised lung preparations, either degassed or collapsed to zero transpulmonary pressure, and in the course of reinflation of human lungs when the chest is open, secondary to traumatic or surgical pneumothoraxes. In the course of physiological studies on two elite breath-hold divers, who are able to achieve lung volumes well below traditional RV with glossopharyngeal exsufflation, we used MRI lung imaging with inhaled hyperpolarized (129)Xe to visualize ventilatory patterns.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Appl Physiol (1985)

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