Quantification of the in vivo brain ultrashort‐T2* component in healthy volunteers

Author:

Deveshwar Nikhil123ORCID,Yao Jingwen2,Han Misung2ORCID,Dwork Nicholas4ORCID,Shen Xin2ORCID,Ljungberg Emil5ORCID,Caverzasi Eduardo1,Cao Peng6ORCID,Henry Roland7,Green Ari7,Larson Peder E. Z.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging University of California, San Francisco San Francisco California USA

2. UC Berkeley ‐ UCSF Graduate Program in Bioengineering San Francisco California USA

3. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences University of California, Berkeley Berkeley California USA

4. Departments of Biomedical Informatics and Radiology University of Colorado School of Medicine Aurora Colorado USA

5. Department of Medical Radiation Physics Lund University Lund Sweden

6. Department of Diagnostic Radiology Hong Kong University Hong Kong China

7. Department of Neurology University of California, San Francisco San Francisco California USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeRecent work has shown MRI is able to measure and quantify signals of phospholipid membrane‐bound protons associated with myelin in the human brain. This work seeks to develop an improved technique for characterizing this brain ultrashort‐ component in vivo accounting for weighting.MethodsData from ultrashort echo time scans from 16 healthy volunteers with variable flip angles (VFA) were collected and fitted into an advanced regression model to quantify signal fraction, relaxation time, and frequency shift of the ultrashort‐ component.ResultsThe fitted components show intra‐subject differences of different white matter structures and significantly elevated ultrashort‐ signal fraction in the corticospinal tracts measured at 0.09 versus 0.06 in other white matter structures and significantly elevated ultrashort‐ frequency shift in the body of the corpus callosum at 1.5 versus 2.0 ppm in other white matter structures.ConclusionThe significantly different measured components and measured relaxation time of the ultrashort‐ component suggest that this method is picking up novel signals from phospholipid membrane‐bound protons.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

U.S. Department of Defense

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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