| Literature DB >> 21549203 |
Jongho Lee1, Peter van Gelderen2, Li-Wei Kuo2, Hellmut Merkle2, Afonso C Silva3, Jeff H Duyn2.
Abstract
Recent MRI studies at high field have observed that, in certain white matter fiber bundles, the signal in T(2)*-weighted MRI (i.e. MRI sensitized to apparent transverse relaxivity) is dependent on fiber orientation θ relative to B(0). In this study, the characteristics of this dependency are quantitatively investigated at 7 T using ex-vivo brain specimens, which allowed a large range of rotation angles to be measured. The data confirm the previously suggested variation of R(2)* (=1/T(2)*) with θ and also indicate that this dependency takes the shape of a combination of sin2θ and sin4θ functions, with modulation amplitudes (=ΔR(2)*) reaching 6.44±0.15 Hz (or ΔT(2)*=2.91±0.33 ms) in the major fiber bundles of the corpus callosum. This particular dependency can be explained by a model of local, sub-voxel scale magnetic field changes resulting from magnetic susceptibility sources that are anisotropic. As an illustration of a potential use of the orientation dependence of R(2)*, the feasibility of generating fiber orientation maps from R(2)* data is investigated. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21549203 PMCID: PMC3119254 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2011.04.026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroimage ISSN: 1053-8119 Impact factor: 6.556