| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5407212 | Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2008 | 8 Pages | 
Abstract
												Dynamic nuclear polarization and dissolution of a 13C-labeled substrate enables the dynamic imaging of cellular metabolism. Spectroscopic information is typically acquired, making the acquisition of dynamic volumetric data a challenge. To enable rapid volumetric imaging, a spectral-spatial excitation pulse was designed to excite a single line of the carbon spectrum. With only a single resonance present in the signal, an echo-planar readout trajectory could be used to resolve spatial information, giving full volume coverage of 32 Ã 32 Ã 16 voxels every 3.5 s. This high frame rate was used to measure the different lactate dynamics in different tissues in a normal rat model and a mouse model of prostate cancer.
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											Authors
												Charles H. Cunningham, Albert P. Chen, Michael Lustig, Brian A. Hargreaves, Janine Lupo, Duan Xu, John Kurhanewicz, Ralph E. Hurd, John M. Pauly, Sarah J. Nelson, Daniel B. Vigneron, 
											