MR Imaging of Human Brain at 3.0 T: Preliminary Report on Transverse Relaxation Rates and Relation to Estimated Iron Content
- 1 March 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) in Radiology
- Vol. 210 (3), 759-767
- https://doi.org/10.1148/radiology.210.3.r99fe41759
Abstract
To determine the transverse relaxation rates R2 and R2' from several gray matter regions and from frontal cortical white matter in healthy human brains in vivo and to determine the relationship between relaxation rates and iron concentration [Fe]. Six healthy adults aged 19-42 years underwent thin-section gradient-echo sampling of free induction decay and echo magnetic resonance (MR) imaging at 3.0 T. Imaging covered the mesencephalon and basal ganglia. Relaxation rates (mean +/- SD) were highest in globus pallidus (R2 = 25.8 seconds-1 +/- 1.1, R2' = 12.0 seconds-1 +/- 2.1) and lowest in prefrontal cortex (R2 = 14.4 seconds-1 +/- 1.8, R2' = 3.4 seconds-1 +/- 1.1). Frontal white matter measurements were as follows: R2 = 18.0 seconds-1 +/- 1.2 and R2' = 3.9 seconds-1 +/- 1.2. For gray matter, both R2 and R2' showed a strong correlation (r = 0.92, P < .001 and r = 0.90, P < .001, respectively) with [Fe]. Although the slopes of the regression lines for R2' versus [Fe] and for R2 versus [Fe] were similar, the iron-independent component of R2' (2.2 seconds-1 +/- 0.6), the value when [Fe] = 0, was much less than that of R2 (12.7 seconds-1 +/- 0.7). The small iron-independent component R2', as compared with that of R2, is consistent with the hypothesis that R2' has higher iron-related specificity.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Three‐dimensional mapping of the static magnetic field inside the human headMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1996
- Estimation of brain iron in vivo by means of the interecho time dependence of image contrastMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1996
- Estimation of the iron concentration in excised gray matter by means of proton relaxation measurementsMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1996
- The relation between brain iron and NMR relaxation times: An in vitro studyMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1996
- The quantitative Relation Between T1‐Weighted and T2‐Weighted MRI of Normal gray Matter and iron concentrationJournal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, 1995
- Comparison of t2 relaxation in blood, brain, and ferritinJournal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, 1995
- Magnetization Transfer and T2 Relaxation Components in TissueMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1995
- The design and test of a new volume coil for high field imagingMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1994
- High frequency volume coils for clinical NMR imaging and spectroscopyMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1994
- Reduction of susceptibility artifact in gradient‐echo imagingMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1992