Sara Pires Monteiro, Lydiane Hirschler, Emmanuel L Barbier, Patricia Figueiredo, Noam Shemesh
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Adequate perfusion is critical for maintaining normal brain function and aberrations thereof are hallmarks of many diseases. Pseudo-Continuous Arterial Spin Labeling (pCASL) MRI enables noninvasive quantitative perfusion mapping without contrast agent injection and with a higher signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) than alternative methods. Despite its great potential, pCASL remains challenging, unstable, and relatively low-resolution in rodents - especially in mice - thereby limiting the investigation of perfusion properties in many transgenic or other relevant rodent models of disease. Here, we address this gap by developing a novel experimental setup for high-resolution pCASL imaging in mice and combining it with the enhanced SNR of cryogenic probes. We show that our new experimental setup allows for optimal positioning of the carotids within the cryogenic coil, rendering labeling reproducible. With the proposed methodology, we managed to increase the spatial resolution of pCASL perfusion images by a factor of 15 in mice; a factor of 6 in rats is gained compared to the state of the art just by virtue of the cryogenic coil. We also show that the improved pCASL perfusion imaging allows much better delineation of specific brain areas, both in healthy animals as well as in rat and mouse models of stroke. Our results bode well for future high-definition pCASL perfusion imaging in rodents.
期刊介绍:
NMR in Biomedicine is a journal devoted to the publication of original full-length papers, rapid communications and review articles describing the development of magnetic resonance spectroscopy or imaging methods or their use to investigate physiological, biochemical, biophysical or medical problems. Topics for submitted papers should be in one of the following general categories: (a) development of methods and instrumentation for MR of biological systems; (b) studies of normal or diseased organs, tissues or cells; (c) diagnosis or treatment of disease. Reports may cover work on patients or healthy human subjects, in vivo animal experiments, studies of isolated organs or cultured cells, analysis of tissue extracts, NMR theory, experimental techniques, or instrumentation.