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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Exchange-dependent relaxation in the rotating frame for slow and intermediate exchange -- modeling off-resonant spin-lock and chemical exchange saturation transfer.

Moritz Zaiss, +1 more
- 01 May 2013 - 
- Vol. 26, Iss: 5, pp 507-518
TLDR
An analytical solution of the Bloch–McConnell equations that describes the magnetization of coupled spin populations under radiofrequency irradiation is derived and it is shown that existing theoretical treatments for CEST are special cases of this approach.
Abstract
Chemical exchange observed by NMR saturation transfer (CEST) and spin-lock (SL) experiments provide an MRI contrast by indirect detection of exchanging protons. The determination of the relative concentrations and exchange rates is commonly achieved by numerical integration of the Bloch-McConnell equations. We derive an analytical solution of the Bloch-McConnell equations that describes the magnetization of coupled spin populations under radiofrequency irradiation. As CEST and off-resonant SL are equivalent, their steady-state magnetization and dynamics can be predicted by the same single eigenvalue: the longitudinal relaxation rate in the rotating frame R1ρ . For the case of slowly exchanging systems, e.g. amide protons, the saturation of the small proton pool is affected by transverse relaxation (R2b ). It turns out, that R2b is also significant for intermediate exchange, such as amine- or hydroxyl-exchange or paramagnetic CEST agents, if pools are only partially saturated. We propose a solution for R1ρ that includes R2 of the exchanging pool by extending existing approaches, and verify it by numerical simulations. With the appropriate projection factors, we obtain an analytical solution for CEST and SL for nonzero R2 of the exchanging pool, exchange rates in the range 1-10(4) Hz, B1 from 0.1 to 20 μT and arbitrary chemical shift differences between the exchanging pools, whilst considering the dilution by direct water saturation across the entire Z-spectra. This allows the optimization of irradiation parameters and the quantification of pH-dependent exchange rates and metabolite concentrations. In addition, we propose evaluation methods that correct for concomitant direct saturation effects. It is shown that existing theoretical treatments for CEST are special cases of this approach.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) and MR Z-spectroscopy in vivo: a review of theoretical approaches and methods.

TL;DR: This review considers analytical solutions of the Bloch–McConnell (BM) equation system which enable deep insight and theoretical description of CEST and the equivalent off-resonant spinlock (SL) experiments and derive and discuss proposed theoretical treatments in detail to understand the influence of saturation parameters on the acquired Z-spectrum and how the different effects interfere and can be isolated in MR Z-Spectroscopy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inverse Z-spectrum analysis for spillover-, MT-, and T1 -corrected steady-state pulsed CEST-MRI--application to pH-weighted MRI of acute stroke.

TL;DR: A spillover correction is of special interest for clinical static field strengths and protons resonating near the water peak, as it forms the motivation for simple metrics that correct the CEST signal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relaxation-compensated CEST-MRI of the human brain at 7T: Unbiased insight into NOE and amide signal changes in human glioblastoma.

TL;DR: After correction, the CEST effect of amides and Nuclear-Overhauser-mediated saturation transfer does not show significant contrast between contrast enhancing tumor regions and normal tissue, whereas NOE drops significantly in the tumor area, suggesting that previous CEST approaches might not have shown pure CEST effects, but rather water relaxation shine-through effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correction of B1-inhomogeneities for relaxation-compensated CEST imaging at 7 T.

TL;DR: Two approaches for B1‐inhomogeneity correction, based on either CEST contrasts or Z‐spectra, are investigated and showed improvement of the image quality compared with the non‐corrected CEST images, especially in the tumor region.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Reaction Rates by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance

TL;DR: In this paper, the modified Bloch equations for nuclear magnetic resonance are modified to describe the magnetic resonance of a single nuclear species X which is transferred back and forth between two (or more) magnetic environments (A,B) by kinetic molecular processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

T1, T2 relaxation and magnetization transfer in tissue at 3T

TL;DR: The results provide a useful reference for optimization of pulse sequence parameters for MRI at 3 T and the phenomenological MT parameter, magnetization transfer ratio, MTR, was lower by approximately 2 to 10%.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using the amide proton signals of intracellular proteins and peptides to detect pH effects in MRI.

TL;DR: P pH effects were noninvasively imaged in ischemic rat brain to show the potential of amide proton transfer (APT) contrast for detecting acute stroke, and opens the possibility of using intrinsic pH contrast, as well as protein- and/or peptide-content contrast, in clinical imaging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water saturation shift referencing (WASSR) for chemical exchange saturation transfer (CEST) experiments.

TL;DR: The WASSR method was applied to study glycogen, where the chemical shift difference between the hydroxyl (OH) protons and bulk water protons at 3T is so small that the CEST spectrum is inconclusive without proper referencing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetic resonance imaging of glutamate

TL;DR: In a rat brain tumor model with blood-brain barrier disruption, intravenous glutamate injection resulted in a clear elevation of GluCEST and a similar increase in the proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy signal of glutamate, demonstrating the feasibility of using GLUCEST for mapping relative changes in glutamate concentration, as well as pH, in vivo.
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