Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5020425 | Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials | 2017 | 23 Pages |
Abstract
The noninvasive imaging technique of magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) was used to estimate the power law behavior of the viscoelastic properties of the human brain in vivo. The mechanical properties for four volunteers are investigated using shear waves induced over a frequency range of 10-50 Hz to produce a displacement field measured by magnetic resonance motion-encoding gradients. The average storage modulus (μR) reconstructed with non-linear inversion (NLI) increased from approximately 0.95 to 2.58 kPa over the 10-50 Hz span; the average loss modulus (μI) also increased from 0.29 to 1.25 kPa over the range. These increases were modeled by independent power law (PL) relations for μR and μI returning whole brain, group mean exponent values of 0.88 and 1.07 respectively. Investigation of these exponents also showed distinctly different behavior in the region of the cerebral falx compared to other brain structures.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Biomedical Engineering
Authors
J. Testu, M.D.J. McGarry, F. Dittmann, J.B. Weaver, K.D. Paulsen, I. Sack, E.E.W. Van Houten,