10:30 |
0726. |
Layer-Specific
manganese-enhanced MRI of the retina associated with light
and dark adaptation at 11.7T
Bryan H DeLaGarza1, Guang Li1,
Yen-Yu I Shih1, and Timothy Q Duong1
1Research Imaging Institute,
Ophthalmology/Radiology, Univ. of Texas Health Science
Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, United States
This study used functional manganese-enhanced MRI (MEMRI
at 20x20µm) to study the retina under light and dark
adaptation. Layer-specific MEMRI of the inner retina,
outer retina and the choroid were resolved and they were
assigned with independent confirmation of the bounding
vascular layers via an intravascular contrast agent. The
outer retina had lower MEMRI activity in light compared
to dark adaption. The inner retina had higher MEMRI
activity in light compared to dark adaption. The choroid
MEMRI activity was not statistically different between
light and dark adaptation. This approach could have
potential applications to probe retinal dysfunction in
diseased states.
|
10:42 |
0727. |
In vivo Mn-enhanced MRI
for Visuotopic Mapping in Normal and Reorganized Brains
Kevin C Chan1,2, and Ed X. Wu1,3
1Laboratory of Biomedical Imaging and Signal
Processing, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong
Kong, China, 2Department
of Ophthalmology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, United States, 3Department
of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, The University
of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong Kong, China
This study employed localized Mn-enhanced MRI via 3
different routes of Mn2+ administrations for visuotopic
brain mapping of retinal, callosal and transsynaptic
connections in the normal and reorganized rat brains. In
normal brains, fractionated intravitreal Mn2+ injection
resulted in Mn enhancements in the contralateral
superior colliculus (SC) and lateral geniculate nucleus
(LGN) by 45-60% at 1-3 days after initial Mn2+
injection, and in the contralateral primary visual
cortex (V1) by about 10% at 2-3 days after initial Mn2+
injection. Direct, single-dose Mn2+ injection to the LGN
resulted in Mn enhancement by 8-11% in SC, and 13-21% in
V1 of the ipsilateral hemisphere at 8 to 24 hours after
Mn2+ administration. Intracortical, single-dose Mn2+
injection to the visual cortex resulted in Mn
enhancement by 15-26% in ipsilateral SC, 53-65% in
ipsilateral LGN, 17-25% in contralateral V1/V2
transition zone, and 32-34% in the splenium of corpus
callosum at 8 to 24 hours after Mn2+ administration.
Notably, some patchy patterns were apparent near the
V1/V2 border of the contralateral hemisphere. Upon
intracortical Mn injection, animals which had undergone
neonatal binocular enucleation exhibited larger
projection volumes by about 74% near the V1/V2 border of
the contralateral hemisphere compared to normal rat
brains at 3 months old. The current results demonstrated
the sensitivity of MEMRI for assessing the
neuroarchitecture of the visual brains in vivo without
depth-limitation, and may possess great potentials for
studying the basic neural components in the visual
system longitudinally during development, plasticity,
therapeutic interventions and genetic modifications.
|
10:54 |
0728.
|
Toxicity of Mn2+ in
MEMRI with topical loading
Tsen-Hsuan Lin1, and Sheng-Kwei Song2
1Physics, WUSTL, St Louis, MO, United States, 2Radiology,
Washington University in St Louis, St Louis, MO, United
States
Manganese enhanced MRI (MEMRI) with topical loading is a
novel approach to investigate anterograde axonal
transport of the visual pathway. There is no need to
perform intraocular injection physically damaging the
eye. Topical loading has been demonstrated to produce
similar MEMRI results as with intraocular injections.
However, it is still uncertain if visual function is
affected after MnCl2 loading.
This study determined the minimum dosage for the success
MEMRI and measured the visual function after MnCl2 loading.
Mouse vision was affected but slowly recovered with
0.75M MnCl2 loading.
Based on DTI parameters of optic nerve and T2W images of
retina, the injured retina is likely the cause of the
impaired visual function.
|
11:06 |
0729.
|
Highlighting manganese
transport mechanisms in the nervous system with MEMRI in Aplysia
californica
Ileana Ozana Jelescu1, Romuald Nargeot2,
Denis Le Bihan1, and Luisa Ciobanu1
1NeuroSpin, CEA/DSV/I2BM, Gif sur Yvette,
France, 2Université
Bordeaux 1, CNRS UMR 5287, Bordeaux, France
Manganese is increasingly used as a neuronal tract
tracer but its exact transport pathways are yet to be
identified. Aplysia
californica provides
an ideal framework of identified and large neurons to
explore this matter. We performed MEMRI on its buccal
ganglia to study the Mn2+ transport
in resting state and following dopamine (DA)-induced
activation. We confirmed, for the first time using MEMRI,
the known axonal projections of identified motor neurons
in the peripheral nerves of the ganglia. Images
following DA perfusion showed intercellular Mn2+ transport
with activation. The synapses involved are to be
confirmed by ongoing experiments.
|
11:18 |
0730.
|
Evaluation of functional
connectivety in a cold-microtubule deficient mice using
manganese enhance magnetic resonance imaging in vivo
Alexia Daoust1,2, Emmanuel Luc Barbier1,2,
Annie Andrieux1,2, Sylvain Bohic1,3,
and Jean-Christophe Deloulme1,2
1INSERM, U836, Grenoble, France, 2Université
Joseph Fourier, Grenoble Institut des Neurosciences,
Grenoble, France, 3European
Synchrotron Radiation Facility, Grenoble, France
Stable tubule only polypeptide deficient mice (STOP KO)
are devoid of cold stable microtubule, which induces a
synaptic deficit. In this study, we evaluate the
cortical projections in these mice and in the
corresponding wild type: functionally, using MEMRI
(between 2 and 24h after intracortical injections) and
structurally using gold staining histology. We observed
that the functional deficits observed (long-range
projections) are not correlated to structural deficit
(reduction in tract size).
|
11:30 |
0731. |
Monitoring therapeutic
effects of rhEPO in a rat model of spinal cord injury using
MEMRI
Martin Freitag1, Nadja Walder2,
Jens Hartmann2, Heinz Redl2, Peter
Parzer3, and Bram Stieltjes1
1Quantitative Image-based Disease
Characterization, German Cancer Research Center,
Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, 2Ludwig
Boltzmann Institute for Experimental and Clinical
Traumatology, Research Center of the AUVA, Vienna,
Austria, 3Department
of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Center for
Psychosocial Medicine, Section Disorders of Personality
Development, Heidelberg, Germany
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the short-term
therapeutic effect of recombinant Erythropoietin therapy
in rats with spinal cord injury (SCI) using physical
assessment and manganese enhanced magnetic resonance
imaging (MEMRI). Both the physical performance and the
manganese uptake improved significantly in the treated
group compared to untreated controls. Therefore, we
conclude that MEMRI is well suited for the evaluation of
EPO induced therapy effects in SCI and that MEMRI may be
suitable for future in vivo longitudinal therapy
studies.
|
11:42 |
0732. |
Manganese-enhanced MRI in
a mouse model of de- and remyelination
Susann Boretius1,2, Tanja Ducic3,
Angelika Escher4, Christine Stadelmann4,
and Jens Frahm1
1Biomedizinische NMR Forschungs GmbH,
Max-Planck-Institut für biophysikalische Chemie,
Göttingen, Germany, 2Klinik
für Diagnostische Radiologie, Universitätsklinikum
Schleswig-Holstein, Kiel, Germany, 3Hasylab,
DESY, Hamburg, Germany, 4Institute
of Neuropathology, University Medical Center,
Georg-August-University, Göttingen, Germany
Due to its calcium-like properties and shortening of T1,
manganese is widely used in experimental animal
research. However, little is known about Mn2+ accumulation
under pathological conditions. We analyzed C57BL/6 mice
at 2 and 4 weeks after cuprizone treatment resulting in
toxic demyelination and at 10 days after cuprizone
withdrawal (recovery stage). At each time manganese
accumulation was observed in distinct brain areas,
correlating best with activated microglia cells.
Synchroton based X-ray fluorescence microscopy revealed
co-localization of calcium and manganese in cell-body
like structures. Manganese-enhanced MRI may
significantly contribute to understanding of immune cell
activation and accumulation in various diseases.
|
11:54 |
0733.
|
Design and Synthesis of
Manganese based MRI contrast agent: A dual contrast under
different MRI parameters
Neeraj Rastogi1, Nidhi Tyagi2,
Kaushik Ghosh2, and Raja Roy1
1Centre of Biomedical Magnetic Resonance,
Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India, 2Department
of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee,
Uttarakhand, India
In the present work, a non-lanthanide Manganese
containing new ligand based MRI contrast agent has been
designed and synthesized with a possibility of binding
with amyloid plaques. Relaxivity studies were performed
at 3T under different imaging parameters. The contrast
agent demonstrated comparable r1with standard as well as
enhanced negative contrast in relaxivity studies
performed on phantom created. The relaxivity value r1
for Mn contrast was found to be comparable (7.24 /mM/s)
with respect to Gd-DTPA (8.26 /mM/s). While, T2
shortening efficacy in terms of r2 was 41.26 /mM/s
approximately four times more (11.10 /mM/s) as compared
to Gd-DTPA.
|
12:06 |
0734. |
Evidence of Reduced
Cardiac Calcium Channel Activity and the Reversal of
Sodium-Calcium Exchanger in Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury by
Manganese-Enhanced MRI
Ya Chen1, Akemichi Baba2, Toshio
Matsuda2, and Xin Yu1
1Department of Biomedical Engineering and
Case Center for Imaging Research, Case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland, OH, United States, 2Graduate
School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Osaka University,
Osaka, Japan
The present study aimed at investigating whether
manganese-enhanced MRI (MEMRI) is also sensitive to
detect the calcium channel and NCX activities after
ischemia during earlier reperfusion. Using a rapid
T1-mapping method, we investigated the dynamics of R1
changes in manganese-perfused rat hearts with and
without 20 min ischemia and with and without NCX
inhibition by SEA0400.
|
12:18 |
0735. |
Towards building a high
resolution atlas of Mn2+ deposition
in rat brain
Dai Shan1, Shaorui Li1, Liqin Yang2,
and Hao Lei1
1State Key Laboratory of Magnetic Resonance
and Atomic and Molecular Physics, Wuhan Institute of
Physics and Mathematics, Chinese Academy of Sciences,
Wuhan, Hubei, China, 2Wuhan
Institute of Physics and Mathematics, Chinese Academy of
Sciences, China
In this study we proposed a protocol to analyze high
resolution MEMRI data with a voxel-based approach. The
aim is to build a high resolution MEMRI atlas which can
be used to reveal fine cytoarchitecture of the brain at
the group level, and to identify functionally distinct
brain regions which show differential activities in Mn2+
uptake/deposition.
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