RESUMO
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Imaging (MRSI) is a powerful technique that can map the metabolic profile in the brain non-invasively. Extracranial lipid contamination and insufficient B0 homogeneity however hampers robustness, and as a result has hindered widespread use of MRSI in clinical and research settings. Over the last six years we have developed highly effective extracranial lipid suppression methods with a second order gradient insert (ECLIPSE) utilizing inner volume selection (IVS) and outer volume suppression (OVS) methods. While ECLIPSE provides > 100-fold in lipid suppression with modest radio frequency (RF) power requirements and immunity to B1+ field variations, axial coverage is reduced for non-elliptical head shapes. In this work we detail the design, construction, and utility of MC-ECLIPSE, a pulsed second order gradient coil with Z2 and X2Y2 fields, combined with a 54-channel multi-coil (MC) array. The MC-ECLIPSE platform allows arbitrary region of interest (ROI) shaped OVS for full-axial slice coverage, in addition to MC-based B0 field shimming, for robust human brain proton MRSI. In vivo experiments demonstrate that MC-ECLIPSE allows axial brain coverage of 92-95 % is achieved following arbitrary ROI shaped OVS for various head shapes. The standard deviation (SD) of the residual B0 field following SH2 and MC shimming were 25 ± 9 Hz and 18 ± 8 Hz over a 5 cm slab, and 18 ± 5 Hz and 14 ± 6 Hz over a 1.5 cm slab, respectively. These results demonstrate that B0 magnetic field shimming with the MC array supersedes second order harmonic capabilities available on standard MRI systems for both restricted and large ROIs. Furthermore, MC based B0 shimming provides comparable shimming performance to an unrestricted SH5 shim set for both restricted, and 5-cm slab shim challenges. Phantom experiments demonstrate the high level of localization performance achievable with MC-ECLIPSE, with ROI edge chemical shift displacements ranging from 1-3 mm with a median value of 2 mm, and transition width metrics ranging from 1-2.5 mm throughout the ROI edge. Furthermore, MC based B0 shimming is comparable to performance following a full set of unrestricted spherical harmonic fields up to order 5. Short echo time MRSI and GABA-edited MRSI acquisitions in the human brain following MC-shimming and arbitrary ROI shaping demonstrate full-axial slice coverage and extracranial lipid artifact free spectra. MC-ECLIPSE allows full-axial coverage and robust MRSI acquisitions, while allowing interrogation of cortical tissue proximal to the skull, which has significant value in a wide range of neurological and psychiatric conditions.
Assuntos
Encéfalo , Lipídeos , Humanos , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Lipídeos/análise , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Espectroscopia de Prótons por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Masculino , Adulto , FemininoRESUMO
PURPOSE: To design and implement a multi-coil (MC) array for B0 field generation for image encoding and simultaneous advanced shimming in a novel 1.5T head-only MRI scanner. METHODS: A 31-channel MC array was designed following the unique constraints of this scanner design: The vertically oriented magnet is very short, stopping shortly above the shoulders of a sitting subject, and includes a window for the subject to see through. Key characteristics of the MC hardware, the B0 field generation capabilities, and thermal behavior, were optimized in simulations prior to its construction. The unit was characterized via bench testing. B0 field generation capabilities were validated on a human 4T MR scanner by analysis of experimental B0 fields and by comparing images for several MRI sequences acquired with the MC array to those acquired with the system's linear gradients. RESULTS: The MC system was designed to produce a multitude of linear and nonlinear magnetic fields including linear gradients of up to 10 kHz/cm (23.5 mT/m) with MC currents of 5 A per channel. With water cooling it can be driven with a duty cycle of up to 74% and ramp times of 500 µs. MR imaging experiments encoded with the developed multi-coil hardware were largely artifact-free; residual imperfections were predictable, and correctable. CONCLUSION: The presented compact multi-coil array is capable of generating image encoding fields with amplitudes and quality comparable to clinical systems at very high duty cycles, while additionally enabling high-order B0 shimming capabilities and the potential for nonlinear encoding fields.
Assuntos
Encéfalo , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Humanos , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Imagens de Fantasmas , Campos Magnéticos , ArtefatosRESUMO
PURPOSE: To integrate deuterium metabolic imaging (DMI) with clinical MRI through an interleaved MRI and DMI acquisition workflow. Interleaved MRI-DMI was enabled with hardware and pulse sequence modifications, and the performance was demonstrated using fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI as an example. METHODS: Interleaved FLAIR-DMI was developed by interleaving the 2 H excitation and acquisition time windows into the intrinsic delay periods presented in the FLAIR method. All 2 H MR signals were up-converted to the 1 H Larmor frequency using a custom-built hardware unit, which also achieved frequency and phase locking of the output signal in real-time. The interleaved measurements were compared with direct measurements both in phantom and in the human brain in vivo. RESULTS: The interleaved MRI-DMI acquisition strategy allowed simultaneous detection of FLAIR MRI and DMI in the same scan time as a FLAIR-only MRI acquisition. Both phantom and in vivo data showed that the MR image quality, DMI sensitivity as well as information content were preserved using interleaved MRI-DMI. CONCLUSION: The interleaved MRI-DMI technology can be used to extend clinical MRI protocols with DMI, thereby offering a metabolic component to the MR imaging contrasts without a penalty on patient comfort or scan time.
Assuntos
Encéfalo , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Meios de Contraste , Deutério , Humanos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Imagens de FantasmasRESUMO
A multitude of extracranial lipid suppression methods exist for proton MRSI acquisitions. Popular and emerging lipid suppression methods each have their inherent set of advantages and disadvantages related to the achievable level of lipid suppression, RF power deposition, insensitivity to B1+ field and lipid T1 heterogeneity, brain coverage, spatial selectivity, chemical shift displacement (CSD) errors and the reliability of spectroscopic data spanning the observed 0.9-4.7 ppm band. The utility of elliptical localization with pulsed second order fields (ECLIPSE) was previously demonstrated with a greater than 100-fold in extracranial lipid suppression and low power requirements utilizing 3 kHz bandwidth AFP pulses. Like all gradient-based localization methods, ECLIPSE is sensitive to CSD errors, resulting in a modified metabolic profile in edge-of-ROI voxels. In this work, ECLIPSE is extended with 15 kHz bandwidth second order gradient-modulated RF pulses based on the gradient offset-independent adiabaticity (GOIA) algorithm to greatly reduce CSD and improve spatial selectivity. An adiabatic double spin-echo ECLIPSE inner volume selection (TE = 45 ms) MRSI method and an ECLIPSE outer volume suppression (TE = 3.2 ms) FID-MRSI method were implemented. Both GOIA-ECLIPSE MRSI sequences provided artifact-free metabolite spectra in vivo, with a greater than 100-fold in lipid suppression and less than 2.6 mm in-plane CSD and less than 3.3 mm transition width for edge-of-ROI voxels, representing an ~5-fold improvement compared with the parent, nongradient-modulated method. Despite the 5-fold larger bandwidth, GOIA-ECLIPSE only required a 1.9-fold increase in RF power. The highly robust lipid suppression combined with low CSD and sharp ROI edge transitions make GOIA-ECLIPSE an attractive alternative to commonly employed lipid suppression methods. Furthermore, the low RF power deposition demonstrates that GOIA-ECLIPSE is very well suited for high field (≥3 T) MRSI applications.
Assuntos
Algoritmos , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Prótons , Simulação por Computador , Feminino , Humanos , Lipídeos/análise , Masculino , Imagens de Fantasmas , Ondas de Rádio , Água/análiseRESUMO
PURPOSE: The robust and reliable utilization of proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) at high fields is hampered by several key technical difficulties, including contamination from extracranial lipids. To that end, this work presents novel lipid suppression sequences for proton MRSI in the human brain utilizing elliptical localization with pulsed second-order fields (ECLIPSE). METHODS: Two lipid suppression methods were implemented with the ECLIPSE gradient insert. One method is a variable power, 4-pulse sequence optimized to achieve outer volume suppression (OVS) and compared against a standard, 8-slice OVS method. The second ECLIPSE method is implemented as an inversion recovery (IR) sequence with elliptical inner volume selection (IVS) and compared against a global IR method. RESULTS: The ECLIPSE-OVS sequence provided a 116-fold mean lipid suppression (range, 104-134), whereas an optimized 8-slice OVS sequence achieved 15-fold suppression (range, 13-18). Furthermore, the superior ECLIPSE-OVS suppression was achieved at 30% of the radiofrequency (RF) power required by 8-slice OVS. The ECLIPSE-based IR sequence suppressed skull lipids by 155-fold (range, 122-257), compared to 16-fold suppression (range, 14-19) achieved with IR. CONCLUSION: OVS and IVS executed with ECLIPSE provide robust and effective lipid suppression at reduced RF power with high immunity to variations in B1 and T1 .
Assuntos
Algoritmos , Prótons , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Humanos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Tomografia por Emissão de PósitronsRESUMO
PURPOSE: Spatial encoding for MRI is generally based on linear x, y, and z magnetic field gradients generated by a set of dedicated gradient coils. We recently introduced the dynamic multicoil technique (DYNAMITE) for B0 field control and demonstrated DYNAMITE MRI in a preclinical MR environment. In this study, we report the first realization of DYNAMITE MRI of the in vivo human head. METHODS: Gradient fields for DYNAMITE MRI were generated with a 28-channel multicoil hardware arranged in 4 rows of 7 coils on a cylindrical surface (length 359 mm, diameter 344 mm, maximum 5 A per coil). DYNAMITE MRIs of a resolution phantom and in vivo human heads were acquired with multislice gradient-echo, multislice spin-echo, and 3D gradient-echo sequences. The resultant image fidelity was compared to that obtained with conventional gradient coil technology. RESULTS: DYNAMITE field control enabled the realization of all imaging sequences with average gradient errors ≤ 1%. DYNAMITE MRI provided image quality and sensitivity comparable to conventional gradient technology without any obvious artifacts. Some minor geometric deformations were noticed primarily in the image periphery as the result of regional field imperfections. The imperfections can be readily approximated theoretically through numerical integration of the Biot-Savart law and removed through image distortion correction. CONCLUSION: The first realization of DYNAMITE MRI of the in vivo human head has been presented. The obtained image fidelity is comparable to MRI with conventional gradient coils, paving the way for full-fledged DYNAMITE MRI and B0 shim systems for human applications.
Assuntos
Encéfalo , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Artefatos , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Humanos , Campos Magnéticos , Imagens de FantasmasRESUMO
Deuterium metabolic imaging (DMI) is a novel MR-based method to spatially map metabolism of deuterated substrates such as [6,6'-2 H2 ]-glucose in vivo. Compared with traditional 13 C-MR-based metabolic studies, the MR sensitivity of DMI is high due to the larger 2 H magnetic moment and favorable T1 and T2 relaxation times. Here, the magnetic field dependence of DMI sensitivity and transmit efficiency is studied on phantoms and rat brain postmortem at 4, 9.4 and 11.7 T. The sensitivity and spectral resolution on human brain in vivo are investigated at 4 and 7 T before and after an oral dose of [6,6'-2 H2 ]-glucose. For small animal surface coils (Ø 30 mm), the experimentally measured sensitivity and transmit efficiency scale with the magnetic field to a power of +1.75 and -0.30, respectively. These are in excellent agreement with theoretical predictions made from the principle of reciprocity for a coil noise-dominant regime. For larger human surface coils (Ø 80 mm), the sensitivity scales as a +1.65 power. The spectral resolution increases linearly due to near-constant linewidths. With optimal multireceiver arrays the acquisition of DMI at a nominal 1 mL spatial resolution is feasible at 7 T.
Assuntos
Deutério/metabolismo , Campos Magnéticos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Animais , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética Nuclear de Carbono-13 , Humanos , Imagens de Fantasmas , Ratos , Razão Sinal-RuídoRESUMO
Proton MRSI has great clinical potential for metabolic mapping of the healthy and pathological human brain. Unfortunately, the promise has not yet been fully achieved due to numerous technical challenges related to insufficient spectral quality caused by magnetic field inhomogeneity, insufficient RF transmit power and incomplete lipid suppression. Here a robust, novel method for lipid suppression in 1 H MRSI is presented. The method is based on 2D spatial localization of an elliptical region of interest using pulsed second-order spherical harmonic (SH) magnetic fields. A dedicated, high-amplitude second-order SH gradient setup was designed and constructed, containing coils to generate Z2, X2Y2 and XY magnetic fields. Simulations and phantom MRI results are used to demonstrate the principles of the method and illustrate the manifestation of chemical shift displacement. 1 H MRSI on human brain in vivo demonstrates high quality, robust suppression of extracranial lipids. The method allows a wide range of inner or outer volume selection or suppression and should find application in MRSI, reduced-field-of-view MRI and single-volume MRS.
Assuntos
Algoritmos , Lipídeos/química , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Imagens de Fantasmas , Espectroscopia de Prótons por Ressonância Magnética , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Encéfalo/metabolismo , HumanosRESUMO
The in vivo rat model is a workhorse in neuroscience research, preclinical studies and drug development. A repertoire of MR tools has been developed for its investigation; however, high levels of B0 magnetic field homogeneity are required for meaningful results. The homogenization of magnetic fields in the rat brain, i.e. shimming, is a difficult task because of a multitude of complex, susceptibility-induced field distortions. Conventional shimming with spherical harmonic (SH) functions is capable of compensating for shallow field distortions in limited areas, e.g. in the cortex, but performs poorly in difficult-to-shim subcortical structures or for the entire brain. Based on the recently introduced multi-coil approach for magnetic field modeling, the DYNAmic Multi-coIl TEchnique (DYNAMITE) is introduced for magnetic field shimming of the in vivo rat brain and its benefits for gradient-echo echo-planar imaging (EPI) are demonstrated. An integrated multi-coil/radiofrequency (MC/RF) system comprising 48 individual localized DC coils for B0 shimming and a surface transceive RF coil has been developed that allows MR investigations of the anesthetized rat brain in vivo. DYNAMITE shimming with this MC/RF set-up is shown to reduce the B0 standard deviation to a third of that achieved with current shim technology employing static first- through third-order SH shapes. The EPI signal over the rat brain increased by 31%, and a 24% gain in usable EPI voxels could be realized. DYNAMITE shimming is expected to critically benefit a wide range of preclinical and neuroscientific MR research. Improved magnetic field homogeneity, together with the achievable large brain coverage of this method, will be crucial when signal pathways, cortical circuitry or the brain's default network are studied. Together with the efficiency gains of MC-based shimming compared with SH approaches demonstrated recently, DYNAMITE shimming has the potential to replace conventional SH shim systems in small-bore animal scanners.
Assuntos
Encéfalo/fisiologia , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/instrumentação , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Animais , Imagem Ecoplanar , Eletrodos , Campos Magnéticos , Masculino , Ondas de Rádio , Ratos Sprague-Dawley , VibrissasRESUMO
Deuterium Metabolic Imaging (DMI) is a novel method that can complement traditional anatomical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain. DMI relies on the MR detection of metabolites that become labeled with deuterium (2H) after administration of a deuterated substrate and can provide images with highly specific metabolic information. However, clinical adoption of DMI is complicated by its relatively long scan time. Here, we demonstrate a strategy to interleave DMI data acquisition with MRI that results in a comprehensive neuro-imaging protocol without adding scan time. The interleaved MRI-DMI routine includes four essential clinical MRI scan types, namely T1-weighted MP-RAGE, FLAIR, T2-weighted Imaging (T2W) and susceptibility weighted imaging (SWI), interwoven with DMI data acquisition. Phantom and in vivo human brain data show that MR image quality, DMI sensitivity, as well as information content are preserved in the MRI-DMI acquisition method. The interleaved MRI-DMI technology provides full flexibility to upgrade traditional MRI protocols with DMI, adding unique metabolic information to existing types of anatomical image contrast, without extra scan time.
RESUMO
Gradient modulated RF pulses, especially gradient offset independent adiabaticity (GOIA) pulses, are increasingly gaining attention for high field clinical magnetic resonance spectroscopy and spectroscopic imaging (MRS/MRSI) due to the lower peak B1 amplitude and associated power demands achievable relative to its non-modulated adiabatic full passage counterparts. In this work we describe the development of two GOIA RF pulses: 1) A power efficient, 3.0 ms wideband uniform rate with smooth truncation (WURST) modulated RF pulse with 15 kHz bandwidth compatible with a clinically feasible peak B1 amplitude of 0.87 kHz (or 20 µT), and 2) A highly selective asymmetric 6.66 ms RF pulse with 20 kHz bandwidth designed to achieve a single-sided, fractional transition width of only 1.7%. Effects of potential asynchrony between RF and gradient-modulated (GM) waveforms for 3 ms GOIA-WURST RF pulses was evaluated by simulation and experimentally. Results demonstrate that a 20+ µs asynchrony between RF and GM functions substantially degrades inversion performance when using large RF offsets to achieve translation. A projection-based method is presented that allows a quick calibration of RF and GM asynchrony on pre-clinical/clinical MR systems. The asymmetric GOIA pulse was implemented within a multi-pulse OVS sequence to achieve power efficient, highly-selective, and B1 and T1-independent signal suppression for extracranial lipid suppression. The developed GOIA pulses were utilized with linear gradient modulation (X, Y, Z gradient fields), and with second-order-field modulations (Z2, X2Y2 gradient fields) to provide elliptically-shaped regions-of-interest for MRS and MRSI acquisitions. Both described GOIA-RF pulses have substantial clinical value; specifically, the 3.0 ms GOIA-WURST pulse is beneficial to realize short TE sLASER localized proton MRS/MRSI sequences, and the asymmetric GOIA RF pulse has applications in highly selective outer volume signal suppression to allow interrogation of tissue proximal to extracranial lipids with full-intensity.
Assuntos
Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Processamento de Sinais Assistido por Computador , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Frequência Cardíaca , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Imagens de FantasmasRESUMO
MR imaging and spectroscopy allow the noninvasive measurement of brain function and physiology, but excellent magnetic field homogeneity is required for meaningful results. The homogenization of the magnetic field distribution in the mouse brain (i.e., shimming) is a difficult task due to complex susceptibility-induced field distortions combined with the small size of the object. To date, the achievement of satisfactory whole brain shimming in the mouse remains a major challenge. The magnetic fields generated by a set of 48 circular coils (diameter 13 mm) that were arranged in a cylinder-shaped pattern of 32 mm diameter and driven with individual dynamic current ranges of ±1 A are shown to be capable of substantially reducing the field distortions encountered in the mouse brain at 9.4 Tesla. Static multicoil shim fields allowed the reduction of the standard deviation of Larmor frequencies by 31% compared to second order spherical harmonics shimming and a 66% narrowing was achieved with the slice-specific application of the multicoil shimming with a dynamic approach. For gradient echo imaging, multicoil shimming minimized shim-related signal voids in the brain periphery and allowed overall signal gains of up to 51% compared to spherical harmonics shimming.
Assuntos
Mapeamento Encefálico/métodos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/instrumentação , Animais , Aumento da Imagem/instrumentação , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/instrumentação , Modelos Lineares , Camundongos , Modelos AnimaisRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Data indicate there are tens of thousands of self-administered medication errors each year in the United States alone. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to determine whether information embedded in Quick Response (QR) codes could reduce self-administered medication errors compared to current medication labeling among older and younger age groups. METHODS: Two population samples (Arizona State University undergraduates and senior citizens over 70; n = 55) were recruited for participation. Participants were randomly assigned to 2 groups: one with access to QR code-based information (graphic and text) and a second group with only bottle label information. Participants were allowed 30 minutes to answer 17 scenario-based questions about administering their medications. RESULTS: Statistically significant main effects of more correct answers when using QR code than current bottle labeling, F 1, 51 = 181.57, P < .001, η2 = 0.78, and for younger adults compared to older, F 1, 51 = 24.4, P < .001, η2 = 0.33. CONCLUSION: The study supports the use of QR code technology to increase patient safety of self-administered medications in both older and younger age groups. Future research is needed to address the technological and usability aspects of implementation (eg, phone app, voice, graphic, and text presentation).
Assuntos
Erros de Medicação , Segurança do Paciente , Adulto , Humanos , Tecnologia , Estados UnidosRESUMO
The prefrontal cortex is a common target brain structure in psychiatry and neuroscience due to its role in working memory and cognitive control. Large differences in magnetic susceptibility between the air-filled sinuses and the tissue/bone in the frontal part of the human head cause a strong and highly localized magnetic field focus in the prefrontal cortex. As a result, image distortion and signal dropout are observed in MR imaging. A set of external electrical coils is presented that provides localized and high-amplitude shim fields in the prefrontal cortex, with minimum impact on the rest of the brain when combined with regular zero- to second-order spherical harmonics shimming. The experimental realization of the new shim method strongly minimized or even eliminated signal dropout in gradient-echo images acquired at settings typically used in functional magnetic resonance at 4 T.
Assuntos
Aumento da Imagem/instrumentação , Interpretação de Imagem Assistida por Computador/instrumentação , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/instrumentação , Magnetismo/instrumentação , Córtex Pré-Frontal/anatomia & histologia , Transdutores , Desenho Assistido por Computador , Desenho de Equipamento , Análise de Falha de Equipamento , Humanos , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Sensibilidade e EspecificidadeRESUMO
Pulsed magnetic field gradients are essential for MR imaging and localized spectroscopy applications. However, besides the desired linear field gradients, pulsed currents in a strong external magnetic field also generate unwanted effects like eddy currents, gradient coil vibrations and acoustic noise. While the temporal magnetic field perturbations associated with eddy currents lead to spectral line shape distortions and signal loss, the vibration-related modulations lead to anti-symmetrical sidebands of any large signal (i.e. water), thereby obliterating the signals from low-concentration metabolites. Here the measurement, characterization and compensation of vibration-related magnetic field perturbations is presented. Following a quantitative evaluation of the various temporal components of the main magnetic field, a digital B0 magnetic field waveform is generated which reduces all temporal variations of the main magnetic field to within the spectral noise level.
Assuntos
Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Imagens de Fantasmas , Processamento de Sinais Assistido por Computador , Vibração , ÁguaRESUMO
Rear-end collisions and distraction are major concerns and basic research in cognitive psychology concerning attention in visual search is applicable to these problems. It is proposed that using yellow tail lamps will result in faster reaction times and fewer errors than current tail lamp coloring (red) in detecting brake lamps (red) in a "worst case" scenario where brake lamp onset, lamp intensity and temporal and contextual cues are not available. Participants engaged in a visual search for brake lamps in two conditions, one using red tail lamps with red brake lamps and one with the proposed combination of yellow tail lamps with red brake lamps in which they indicated by keyboard response the presence or absence of braking cars. The hypothesis that separating brake and tail lamps by color alone would produce faster RTs, reduce errors, and provide greater conspicuity was supported. Drivers and non-drivers detect absence and presence of red brake lamps faster and with greater accuracy with the proposed yellow tail lamps than red tail lamps without the aid of any of the aforementioned cues. Vehicle conspicuity will be improved and reductions in rear-end collisions and other accidents will be reduced by implementing the proposed yellow tail lamp coloring.
Assuntos
Acidentes de Trânsito/psicologia , Atenção/fisiologia , Condução de Veículo/psicologia , Equipamentos de Proteção , Segurança , Percepção Visual/fisiologia , Acidentes de Trânsito/prevenção & controle , Adulto , Automóveis , Cognição , Desaceleração , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Tempo de ReaçãoRESUMO
Currently, the only widely available metabolic imaging technique in the clinic is positron emission tomography (PET) detection of the radioactive glucose analog 2-18F-fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose (18FDG). However, 18FDG-PET does not inform on metabolism downstream of glucose uptake and often provides ambiguous results in organs with intrinsic high glucose uptake, such as the brain. Deuterium metabolic imaging (DMI) is a novel, noninvasive approach that combines deuterium magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging with oral intake or intravenous infusion of nonradioactive 2H-labeled substrates to generate three-dimensional metabolic maps. DMI can reveal glucose metabolism beyond mere uptake and can be used with other 2H-labeled substrates as well. We demonstrate DMI by mapping metabolism in the brain and liver of animal models and human subjects using [6,6'-2H2]glucose or [2H3]acetate. In a rat glioma model, DMI revealed pronounced metabolic differences between normal brain and tumor tissue, with high-contrast metabolic maps depicting the Warburg effect. We observed similar metabolic patterns and image contrast in two patients with a high-grade brain tumor after oral intake of 2H-labeled glucose. Further, DMI used in rat and human livers showed [6,6'-2H2]glucose stored as labeled glycogen. DMI is a versatile, robust, and easy-to-implement technique that requires minimal modifications to existing clinical magnetic resonance imaging scanners. DMI has great potential to become a widespread method for metabolic imaging in both (pre)clinical research and the clinic.
Assuntos
Mapeamento Encefálico/métodos , Encéfalo/patologia , Deutério/metabolismo , Glioma/patologia , Glucose/metabolismo , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Animais , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Estudos de Casos e Controles , Glioma/metabolismo , Humanos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Ratos , Ratos Endogâmicos F344RESUMO
Dynamic alteration of shim settings during a multi-slice imaging experiment can improve static magnetic-field homogeneity over extended volumes. In this report, a pre-emphasized dynamic shim updating (DSU) system capable of rapidly updating all non-degenerate zeroth through second-order shims is presented and applied to high-field multi-slice imaging studies on the human brain. DSU is utilized in both non-oblique and oblique slicing geometries while updating in-plane and through-slice shims. Image-based magnetic-field maps are used to quantify homogeneity improvements and comparisons are made on a slice-specific basis between static global shimming and increasing orders of shim inclusion utilized DSU. The influence of oblique slicing geometry on DSU-utilized global homogeneity is also quantified computationally. Finally, the effect of DSU on susceptibility artifact reduction in single-shot axial-sliced EPI is analyzed using experimental acquisitions.
Assuntos
Mapeamento Encefálico/métodos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Artefatos , Estudos de Viabilidade , Humanos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por ComputadorRESUMO
There is a lack of comprehensive research on Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) feasibility to study occupational stress, especially its long-term sustainability. EMA application in education contexts has also been sparse. This study investigated the feasibility of using EMA to study teacher stress over 2 years using both objective compliance data and a self-reported feasibility survey. It also examined the influence of individual and school factors on EMA feasibility. Participants were 202 sixth through eighth grade teachers from 22 urban middle schools in the southern United States. EMA was implemented via an iPod-based Teacher Stress Diary (TSD). Teachers recorded demands, stress responses, and resources during 12 days (6 waves) over 2 years. Feasibility was assessed via compliance data generated by the TSD (e.g., entry completion) and an EMA Feasibility Survey of self-reported user-friendliness and EMA interference. The results showed high compliance regarding entry and item completion, and completion time, which was sustained over time. User-friendliness was appraised as very high and EMA interference as low. Initial difficulties regarding timing and length of assessments were addressed via EMA method refinement, resulting in improved feasibility. Teachers' ethnicity, age, marital status, grade/course taught, class size, class load, and daily workload impacted feasibility. The results supported the feasibility of using EMA to study work stress longitudinally and the value of continued feasibility monitoring. They also support EMA use to study teacher stress and inform EMA implementation in schools. Some teacher and school factors need to be taken into consideration when deciding on EMA implementation in education contexts. (PsycINFO Database Record
Assuntos
Comportamento Cooperativo , Avaliação Momentânea Ecológica , Professores Escolares/psicologia , Autorrelato , Estresse Psicológico/psicologia , Adulto , Avaliação Momentânea Ecológica/estatística & dados numéricos , Feminino , Humanos , Estudos Longitudinais , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Análise de Regressão , Professores Escolares/estatística & dados numéricos , Instituições Acadêmicas , Estados Unidos , População Urbana , Local de Trabalho/psicologia , Adulto JovemRESUMO
This field experiment takes a novel approach in applying methodologies and theories of visual search to the subject of conspicuity in automobile rear lighting. Traditional rear lighting research has not used the visual search paradigm in experimental design. It is our claim that the visual search design uniquely uncovers visual attention processes operating when drivers search the visual field that current designs fail to capture. This experiment is a validation and extension of previous simulator research on this same topic and demonstrates that detection of red automobile brake lamps will be improved if tail lamps are another color (in this test, amber) rather than the currently mandated red. Results indicate that when drivers miss brake lamp onset in low ambient light, RT and error are reduced in detecting the presence and absence of red brake lamps with multiple lead vehicles when tail lamps are not red compared to current rear lighting which mandates red tail lamps. This performance improvement is attributed to efficient visual processing that automatically segregates tail (amber) and brake (red) lamp colors into distractors and targets respectively.