We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Age‐dependent cerebrospinal fluid‐tissue water exchange detected by magnetization transfer indirect spin labeling MRI.
- Authors
Li, Anna M.; Chen, Lin; Liu, Hongshuai; Li, Yuguo; Duan, Wenzhen; Xu, Jiadi
- Abstract
Purpose: A non‐invasive magnetization transfer indirect spin labeling (MISL) MRI method is developed to quantify the water exchange between cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and other tissues in the brain and to examine the age‐dependence of water exchange. Method: In the pulsed MISL, we implemented a short selective pulse followed by a post‐labeling delay before an MRI acquisition with a long echo time; in the continuous MISL, a train of saturation pulses was applied. MISL signal (∆Z) was obtained by the subtraction of the label MRI at −3.5 ppm from the control MRI at 200 ppm. CSF was extracted from the mouse ventricles for the MISL optimization and validation. Comparison between wild type (WT) and aquaporin‐4 knockout (AQP4−/−) mice was performed to examine the contributions of CSF water exchange, whereas its age‐dependence was investigated by comparing the adult and young WT mice. Results: The pulsed MISL method observed that the MISL signal reached the maximum at 1.5 s. The continuous MISL method showed the highest MISL signal in the fourth ventricle (∆Z = 13.5% ± 1.4%), whereas the third ventricle and the lateral ventricles had similar MISL ∆Z values (∆Z = 12.0% ± 1.8%). Additionally, significantly lower ∆Z (9.3%–18.7% reduction) was found in all ventricles for the adult mice than those of the young mice (p < 0.02). For the AQP4−/− mice, the ∆Z values were 5.9%–8.3% smaller than those of the age‐matched WT mice in the lateral and fourth ventricles, but were not significant. Conclusion: The MISL method has a great potential to study CSF water exchange with the surrounding tissues in brain.
- Subjects
MAGNETIZATION transfer; SPIN labels; MAGNETIC resonance imaging; CEREBROSPINAL fluid; OVERHAUSER effect (Nuclear physics)
- Publication
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 2022, Vol 87, Issue 5, p2287
- ISSN
0740-3194
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/mrm.29137