» Articles » PMID: 3367774

Dynamic Imaging with Lanthanide Chelates in Normal Brain: Contrast Due to Magnetic Susceptibility Effects

Overview
Journal Magn Reson Med
Publisher Wiley
Specialty Radiology
Date 1988 Feb 1
PMID 3367774
Citations 111
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Using a one-dimensional rapid imaging technique, we have found that injection of lanthanide chelates such as Gd(DTPA)2- leads to a significant decrease (50%) in rat brain signal intensity at 1.45 T using T2-weighted pulse sequences; however, no effect of comparable size is observed with T1-weighted pulse sequences. The transient effect and its kinetics were followed with a temporal resolution of between 1 and 8 s. Experiments with different lanthanide chelates show that the observed decrease in signal intensity correlates with the magnetic moment of each agent but not with their longitudinal relaxivity. Three-dimensional chemical-shift resolved experiments demonstrate significant line broadening in brain during infusion with Dy(DTPA)2-. Our results show that the cause of this effect is the difference in susceptibility between the capillaries, containing the contrast agent, and the surrounding tissue. As a result of these susceptibility differences, field gradients are produced in the tissue and diffusion of water through these gradients leads to a loss of spin phase coherence and thus a decrease in signal intensity. We propose this as a new type of contrast agent mechanism in NMR. The effect and its kinetics are likely to be related to important physiological parameters such as cerebral blood volume and cerebral blood flow, and do not depend on a breakdown of the blood-brain barrier as do conventional contrast agent techniques.

Citing Articles

Elucidating hemodynamics and neuro-glio-vascular signaling using rodent fMRI.

Zhou X, Jiang Y, Gomez-Cid L, Yu X Trends Neurosci. 2025; 48(3):227-241.

PMID: 39843335 PMC: 11903151. DOI: 10.1016/j.tins.2024.12.010.


Mapping cerebral perfusion in mice under various anesthesia levels using highly sensitive BOLD MRI with transient hypoxia.

Le T, Im G, Lee C, Choi S, Kim S Sci Adv. 2024; 10(9):eadm7605.

PMID: 38416820 PMC: 10901365. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adm7605.


Synthetic interpolated DSA for radiation exposure reduction via gamma variate contrast flow modeling: a retrospective cohort study.

Abumoussa A, Flores A, Cornea C, Thapa D, Petty A, Gelinne A Eur Radiol Exp. 2024; 8(1):25.

PMID: 38361025 PMC: 10869670. DOI: 10.1186/s41747-023-00404-2.


Turning brain MRI into diagnostic PET: O-water PET CBF synthesis from multi-contrast MRI via attention-based encoder-decoder networks.

Hussein R, Shin D, Zhao M, Guo J, Davidzon G, Steinberg G Med Image Anal. 2024; 93:103072.

PMID: 38176356 PMC: 10922206. DOI: 10.1016/j.media.2023.103072.


Identification of Family with Sequence Similarity 110 Member C (FAM110C) as a Candidate Diagnostic and Prognostic Biomarker for Glioma.

Ren D, Zhuang X, Lv Y, Zhang Y, Xu J, Gao F Iran J Public Health. 2023; 52(10):2117-2127.

PMID: 37899918 PMC: 10612548. DOI: 10.18502/ijph.v52i10.13850.