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  4. A comparison of in vivo (13) C MR brain glycogen quantification at 9.4 and 14.1 T
 
research article

A comparison of in vivo (13) C MR brain glycogen quantification at 9.4 and 14.1 T

van Heeswijk, Ruud  
•
Pilloud, Yves
•
Morgenthaler, Florence D.
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2012
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine

The high molecular weight and low concentration of brain glycogen render its noninvasive quantification challenging. Therefore, the precision increase of the quantification by localized (13) C MR at 9.4 to 14.1 T was investigated. Signal-to-noise ratio increased by 66%, slightly offset by a T(1) increase of 332 ± 15 to 521 ± 34 ms. Isotopic enrichment after long-term (13) C administration was comparable (∼40%) as was the nominal linewidth of glycogen C1 (∼50 Hz). Among the factors that contributed to the 66% observed increase in signal-to-noise ratio, the T(1) relaxation time impacted the effective signal-to-noise ratio by only 10% at a repetition time = 1 s. The signal-to-noise ratio increase together with the larger spectral dispersion at 14.1 T resulted in a better defined baseline, which allowed for more accurate fitting. Quantified glycogen concentrations were 5.8 ± 0.9 mM at 9.4 T and 6.0 ± 0.4 mM at 14.1 T; the decreased standard deviation demonstrates the compounded effect of increased magnetization and improved baseline on the precision of glycogen quantification. Magn Reson Med, 2011. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/mrm.23192
Web of Science ID

WOS:000304086000004

Author(s)
van Heeswijk, Ruud  
Pilloud, Yves
Morgenthaler, Florence D.
Gruetter, Rolf  
Date Issued

2012

Publisher

Wiley

Published in
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
Volume

67

Issue

6

Start page

1523

End page

7

Subjects

brain glycogen

•

concentration quantification

•

C13 spectroscopy

•

14

•

1 T

•

T1 relaxation

•

Nmr-Spectroscopy

•

Metabolism

•

Astrocytes

•

Humans

•

CIBM-AIT

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
CIBM  
LIFMET  
Available on Infoscience
May 26, 2012
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/80806
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