10:45 |
0020. |
Diffusion Magnetic
Resonance Monitors Intramyocellular Lipid Droplet Size In
Vivo
Peng Cao1,2, Shu-Juan J. Fan1,2,
Anna M. Wang1,2, Victor B. Xie1,2,
Zhongwei Qiao1,2, Gary M. Brittenham3,
and Ed X. Wu1,2
1Laboratory of Biomedical Imaging and Signal
Processing, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong
Kong, China, 2Department
of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, The University
of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong Kong, China, 3Departments
of Pediatrics and Medicine, Columbia University College
of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY, United States
Intramyocellular lipid (IMCL) droplets are dynamic
organelles whose morphology reflects their vital roles
in lipid synthesis, utilization and storage in muscle
energy metabolism. To develop non-invasive means to
measure droplet microstructure in vivo, we investigated
the molecular diffusion behavior of IMCL with diffusion
MR spectroscopy. Our results demonstrate the feasibility
of MR diffusion characterization of IMCL droplet
microstructure and provide evidence of the sensitivity
of this method to metabolic alterations. The use of
diffusion MR methodology in vivo promises to provide new
biophysical insights in the investigation of droplet
dynamics and lipid metabolism in both animal models and
human subjects. The diffusion MR results may help
contribute to an improved understanding and diagnosis of
obesity, diabetes and other metabolic disorders.
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11:05 |
0021. |
2D Imaging in a Lightweight
Portable MRI Scanner without Gradient Coils
Clarissa Zimmerman Cooley1,2, Jason P.
Stockmann1,3, Brandon D. Armstrong1,3,
Mathieu Sarracanie1,3, Michael H. Lev4,5,
Matthew S. Rosen1,3, and Lawrence L. Wald1,5
1A. A. Martinos Center for Biomedical
Imaging, Dept. of Radiology, Massachusetts General
Hospital, Charlestown, MA, United States, 2Dept.
of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA,
United States, 3Dept.
of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United
States, 4Dept.
of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston,
MA, United States, 5Harvard
Medical School, Boston, MA, United States
As the premiere modality for brain imaging, MRI could
find wider applicability if lightweight, portable
systems were available for siting in unconventional
locations. We construct and validate a truly portable
(<100kg) and silent proof-of-concept scanner which
replaces conventional gradient encoding with a rotating
lightweight low-field magnet. When rotated about the
object, the inhomogeneous field pattern is used to
create generalized projections which encode the
iteratively reconstructed 2D image. The system is
validated with experimental images of 2D test phantoms.
This new scanner architecture demonstrates the potential
for portability by simultaneously relaxing the magnet
homogeneity criteria and eliminating the gradient coil.
|
11:25 |
0023. |
MRI Demonstrates a Decrease
in Myocardial Infarct Healing and Increase in Compensatory
Ventricular Hypertrophy Following Mechanical Microvascular
Obstruction
Hisham Z. Bajwa1, Lois Do1,
Mohammed Suhail1, Steve W. Hetts1,
Mark W. Wilson1, and Maythem Saeed1
1Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University
of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California,
United States
Our study was aimed at providing direct evidence that
mechanical obstruction of microvessels in the coronary
vasculature inhibits myocardial infarct resorption and
enhances LV remodeling using MRI and then confirming
these findings with histopathology. We found that
persistent microvascular obstruction after 3 days was
larger on average and more frequently found in animals
that underwent LAD occlusion/microemboli
delivery/reperfusion than animals that were only
subjected to occlusion/reperfusion. The greater
microvascular obstruction in the former was associated
with less infarct resorption, a greater degree of
increase in LV mass and more pronounced decline in LV
ejection fraction.
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11:45 |
0024. |
Non-Contrast Mapping of
Arterial Delay and Functional Connectivity Using
Resting-State functional MRI: a Study in Moyamoya Patients
Thomas Christen1, Hesamoddin Jahanian1,
Wendy Wei Ni1, Deqiang Qiu1,
Michael E Moseley1, and Greg Zaharchuk1
1Department of Radiology, Stanford
University, Stanford, California, United States
In this work, we investigated if delays in resting-state
spontaneous fluctuations of the BOLD (sfBOLD) signal can
be used to create maps similar to time-to-maximum of the
residue function (Tmax) in Moyamoya patients and to
determine whether these delays affect the results of
brain connectivity mapping.
|
12:05 |
0025. |
Nonrigid Autofocus Motion
Correction for Coronary MR Angiography with a 3D Cones
Trajectory
R Reeve Ingle1, Holden H. Wu2, Nii
Okai Addy1, Jieying Luo1, Joseph
Y. Cheng1, Phillip C. Yang3, Bob S
Hu1,4, and Dwight G Nishimura1
1Electrical Engineering, Stanford University,
Stanford, California, United States, 2Radiological
Sciences, UCLA, California, United States, 3Cardiovascular
Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California,
United States, 4Palo
Alto Medical Foundation, Palo Alto, California, United
States
A nonrigid autofocus motion correction technique is
presented for coronary magnetic resonance angiography (CMRA)
using a free-breathing 3D cones non-Cartesian sequence.
Translational motion measurements from 2D or 3D image
navigators are used to derive a set of candidate motion
trajectories. A bank of motion-compensated CMRA images
is generated using these candidate trajectories, and a
focusing metric is used to reconstruct the final image
by selecting the best-focused pixels. The proposed
technique is shown to improve the depiction of coronary
arteries in volunteer and patient studies.
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