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On the magnetic field dependence of deuterium metabolic imaging

  • Robin A. de Graaf (Corresponding author)
  • , Arjan D. Hendriks
  • , Dennis W.J. Klomp
  • , Chathura Kumaragamage
  • , Dimitri Welting
  • , Catalina S. Arteaga de Castro
  • , Peter B. Brown
  • , Scott McIntyre
  • , Terence W. Nixon
  • , Jeanine J. Prompers
  • , Henk M. De Feyter

    Onderzoeksoutput: Bijdrage aan tijdschriftTijdschriftartikelAcademicpeer review

    Samenvatting

    Deuterium metabolic imaging (DMI) is a novel MR-based method to spatially map metabolism of deuterated substrates such as [6,6'-2H2]-glucose in vivo. Compared with traditional 13C-MR-based metabolic studies, the MR sensitivity of DMI is high due to the larger 2H magnetic moment and favorable T1 and T2 relaxation times. Here, the magnetic field dependence of DMI sensitivity and transmit efficiency is studied on phantoms and rat brain postmortem at 4, 9.4 and 11.7 T. The sensitivity and spectral resolution on human brain in vivo are investigated at 4 and 7 T before and after an oral dose of [6,6'-2H2]-glucose. For small animal surface coils (Ø 30 mm), the experimentally measured sensitivity and transmit efficiency scale with the magnetic field to a power of +1.75 and −0.30, respectively. These are in excellent agreement with theoretical predictions made from the principle of reciprocity for a coil noise-dominant regime. For larger human surface coils (Ø 80 mm), the sensitivity scales as a +1.65 power. The spectral resolution increases linearly due to near-constant linewidths. With optimal multireceiver arrays the acquisition of DMI at a nominal 1 mL spatial resolution is feasible at 7 T.

    Originele taal-2Engels
    Artikelnummere4235
    Aantal pagina's9
    TijdschriftNMR in Biomedicine
    Volume33
    Nummer van het tijdschrift3
    DOI's
    StatusGepubliceerd - 1 mrt. 2020

    Financiering

    This study was supported by NIH grants R01‐EB014861 and R01‐EB025840.

    FinanciersFinanciernummer
    National Institutes of Health, NIH
    National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and BioengineeringR01EB014861, R01EB025840
    European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme850488, 801075

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