Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5406596 | Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2010 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
In vivo proton NMR spectroscopy allows non-invasive detection and quantification of a wide range of biochemical compounds in the brain. Higher field strength is generally considered advantageous for spectroscopy due to increased signal-to-noise and increased spectral dispersion. So far 1H NMR spectra have been reported in the human brain up to 7Â T. In this study we show that excellent quality short echo time STEAM and LASER 1H NMR spectra can be measured in the human brain at 9.4Â T. The information content of the human brain spectra appears very similar to that measured in the past decade in rodent brains at the same field strength, in spite of broader linewidth in human brain. Compared to lower fields, the T1 relaxation times of metabolites were slightly longer while T2 relaxation values of metabolites were shorter (<100Â ms) at 9.4Â T. The linewidth of the total creatine (tCr) resonance at 3.03Â ppm increased linearly with magnetic field (1.35Â Hz/T from 1.5Â T to 9.4Â T), with a minimum achievable tCr linewidth of around 12.5Â Hz at 9.4Â T. At very high field, B0 microsusceptibility effects are the main contributor to the minimum achievable linewidth.
Related Topics
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Authors
Dinesh Kumar Deelchand, Pierre-François Van de Moortele, Gregor Adriany, Isabelle Iltis, Peter Andersen, John P. Strupp, J. Thomas Vaughan, Kâmil UÄurbil, Pierre-Gilles Henry,