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1.
ObjectiveKetamine is a well-known anesthetic. ‘Recreational’ use of ketamine common induces psychosis-like symptoms and cognitive impairments. The acute and chronic effects of ketamine on relevant brain circuits have been studied, but the effects of single-dose ketamine administration on the local resting-state functional properties of the brain remain unknown. In this study, we aimed to assess the effects of single-dose ketamine administration on the brain local intrinsic properties.MethodsWe used resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) to explore the ketamine-induced alterations of brain intrinsic properties. Seven adult rhesus monkeys were imaged with rs-fMRI to examine the fractional amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (fALFF) and regional homogeneity (ReHo) in the brain before and after ketamine injection. Paired comparisons were used to detect the significantly altered regions.ResultsResults showed that the fALFF of the prefrontal cortex (p = 0.046), caudate nucleus (left side, p = 0.018; right side, p = 0.025), and putamen (p = 0.020) in post-injection stage significantly increased compared with those in pre-injection period. The ReHo of nucleus accumbens (p = 0.049), caudate nucleus (p = 0.037), and hippocampus (p = 0.025) increased after ketamine injection, but that of prefrontal cortex decreased (p < 0.05).ConclusionsThese findings demonstrated that single-dose ketamine administration can change the regional intensity and synchronism of brain activity, thereby providing evidence of ketamine-induced abnormal resting-state functional properties in primates. This evidence may help further elucidate the effects of ketamine on the cerebral resting status.  相似文献   

2.

Background

Despite strong evidence that the pathophysiology of Tourette syndrome (TS) involves structural and functional disturbances of the basal ganglia and cortical frontal areas, findings from in vivo imaging studies have provided conflicting results. In this study we used whole brain diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to investigate the microstructural integrity of white matter pathways and brain tissue in 19 unmedicated, adult, male patients with TS “only” (without comorbid psychiatric disorders) and 20 age- and sex-matched control subjects.

Results

Compared to normal controls, TS patients showed a decrease in the fractional anisotropy index (FA) bilaterally in the medial frontal gyrus, the pars opercularis of the left inferior frontal gyrus, the middle occipital gyrus, the right cingulate gyrus, and the medial premotor cortex. Increased apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps were detected in the left cingulate gyrus, prefrontal areas, left precentral gyrus, and left putamen. There was a negative correlation between tic severity and FA values in the left superior frontal gyrus, medial frontal gyrus bilaterally, cingulate gyrus bilaterally, and ventral posterior lateral nucleus of the right thalamus, and a positive correlation in the body of the corpus callosum, left thalamus, right superior temporal gyrus, and left parahippocampal gyrus. There was also a positive correlation between regional ADC values and tic severity in the left cingulate gyrus, putamen bilaterally, medial frontal gyrus bilaterally, left precentral gyrus, and ventral anterior nucleus of the left thalamus.

Conclusions

Our results confirm prior studies suggesting that tics are caused by alterations in prefrontal areas, thalamus and putamen, while changes in the cingulate gyrus seem to reflect secondary compensatory mechanisms. Due to the study design, influences from comorbidities, gender, medication and age can be excluded.  相似文献   

3.
ObjectivesTo investigate normative value and age-related change of brain magnetic resonance T1ρ relaxation at 1.5 T.MethodsThis study was approved by the local ethical committee with participants' written consent obtained. There were 42 adults healthy volunteers, including 20 males (age: 41 ± 16 (mean ± standard deviation) years, range: 22–68 years,) and 22 females (age: 39 ± 15 years, range: 21–62 years). MRI was performed at 1.5 T using 3D fluid suppressed turbo spin echo sequence. Regions-of-interests (ROIs) were obtained by atlas-based tissue segmentation and T1ρ was calculated by fitting the mean value to mono-exponential model. Correlation between T1ρ relaxation of brain gray matter regions and age was investigated.ResultsA regional difference among individual gray matter areas was noted; the highest values were observed in the hippocampus (98.37 ± 5.37 ms, median: 97.88 ms) and amygdala (94.95 ± 4.34 ms, median: 94.73 ms), while the lowest values were observed in the pallidum (83.81 ± 5.49 ms, median: 83.77 ms) and putamen (83.93 ± 4.76 ms, median: 83.99 ms). Gray matter T1ρ values decreased slowly (mean slope: − 0.256) and significantly (p < 0.05) with age in gray matter for subjects younger than 40 years old, while for subjects older than 40 years old there was no apparent correlation between T1ρ relaxation and age. Global white matter measured T1ρ value of 88.65 ± 3.47 ms (median: 87.86 ms), and the correlation with age was not significant (p = 0.18).ConclusionGray matter T1ρ relaxation demonstrates a bi-phase change with age in adults of 22–68 years.  相似文献   

4.
ObjectivesWe validate a 4D strategy tailored for 3 T clinical systems to simultaneously quantify function and infarct size in wild type mice after ischemia/reperfusion, with improved spatial and temporal resolution by comparison to previous published protocols using clinical field MRI systems.MethodsC57BL/6J mice underwent 60 min ischemia/reperfusion (n = 14) or were controls without surgery (n = 6). Twenty-four hours after surgery mice were imaged with gadolinium injection and sacrificed for post-mortem MRI and histology with serum also taken for Troponin I levels. The double ECG- and respiratory-triggered 3D FLASH (Fast Low Angle Shot) gradient echo (GRE) cine sequence had an acquired isotropic resolution of 344 μm, TR/TE of 7.8/2.9 ms and acquisition time 25–35 min. The conventional 2D FLASH cine sequence had the same in-plane resolution of 344 μm, 1 mm slice thickness and TR/TE 11/5.4 ms for an acquisition time of 20–25 min plus 5 min for planning. Left ventricle (LV) and right ventricle (RV) volumes were measured and functional parameters compared 2D to 3D, left to right and for inter and intra observer reproducibility. MRI infarct volume was compared to histology.ResultsFor the function evaluation, the 3D cine outperformed 2D cine for spatial and temporal resolution. Protocol time for the two methods was equivalent (25–35 min). Flow artifacts were reduced (p = 0.008) and epi/endo-cardial delineation showed good intra and interobserver reproducibility. Paired t-test comparing ejection volume left to right showed no significant difference for 3D (p = 0.37), nor 2D (p = 0.30) and correlation slopes of left to right EV were 1.17 (R2 = 0.75) for 2D and 1.05 (R2 = 0.50) for 3D.Quantifiable ‘late gadolinium enhancement’ infarct volume was seen only with the 3D cine and correlated to histology (R2 = 0.89). Left ejection fraction and MRI-measured infarct volume correlated (R2 > 0.3).ConclusionsThe 4D strategy, with contrast injection, was validated in mice for function and infarct quantification from a single scan with minimal slice planning.  相似文献   

5.
PurposeTo evaluate images of non-contrast-enhanced 3D MR portography within a breath-hold (BH) using compressed sensing (CS) compared to standard respiratory-triggered (RT) sequences.Materials and methodsFifty-nine healthy volunteers underwent MR portography using two sequences of balanced steady-state free-precession (bSSFP) with time-spatial labeling inversion pulses (Time-SLIP): BH bSSFP-CS and RT bSSFP. Two radiologists independently scored the diagnostic acceptability to delineate the portal branches (MPV: main portal vein; RPV: right portal vein; LPV: left portal vein; RPPV: right posterior portal vein; and P4 and P8: portal branch of segment 4 and segment 8, respectively) and the overall image quality on a four-point scale. We assessed noninferiority of BH bSSFP-CS to RT bSSFP. For quantitative analysis, vessel-to-liver contrast (Cv-l) was calculated in MPV, RPV and LPV.ResultsBH bSSFP sequence was successfully performed with a 30-second acquisition time. The diagnostic acceptability scores of BH bSSFP-CS compared with RT bSSFP were statistically noninferior: MPV (95% CI for score difference of Reader 1 and Reader 2, respectively: [− 0.16, 0.06], [− 0.05, 0.02]), RPV ([− 0.00, 0.11], [− 0.01, 0.08]), LPV ([− 0.03, 0.10], [− 0.10, 0.03]), RPPV ([− 0.03, 0.10], [− 0.05, 0.05]), P4 ([− 0.13, 0.34], [− 0.28, 0.21]) and P8 ([− 0.21, 0.11], [− 0.25, − 0.02]). However, the overall image quality of BH bSSFP-CS did not show noninferiority ([− 0.61, − 0.24], [− 0.54, − 0.17]). Cv-l values were significantly lower in BH bSSFP-CS (P < 0.001).ConclusionCS enabled non-contrast-enhanced 3D bSSFP MR portography to be performed within a BH while maintaining noninferior diagnostic acceptability compared to standard RT bSSFP MR portography.  相似文献   

6.
Background and purposeTo assess the sensitivity of non-localized, whole-head 1H-MRS to an individual's serial changes in total-brain NAA, Glx, Cr and Cho concentrations — metabolite metrics often used as surrogate markers in neurological pathologies.Materials and methodsIn this prospective study, four back-to-back (single imaging session) and three serial (successive sessions) non-localizing, ~3 min 1H-MRS (TE/TR/TI = 5/104/940 ms) scans were performed on 18 healthy young volunteers: 9 women, 9 men: 29.9 ± 7.6 [mean ± standard deviation (SD)] years old. These were analyzed by calculating a within-subject coefficient of variation (CV = SD/mean) to assess intra- and inter-scan repeatability and prediction intervals. This study was Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act compliant. All subjects gave institutional review board-approved written, informed consent.ResultsThe intra-scan CVs for the NAA, Glx, Cr and Cho were: 3.9 ± 1.8%, 7.3 ± 4.6%, 4.0 ± 3.4% and 2.5 ± 1.6%, and the corresponding inter-scan (longitudinal) values were: 7.0 ± 3.1%, 10.6 ± 5.6%, 7.6 ± 3.5% and 7.0 ± 3.9%. This method is shown to have 80% power to detect changes of 14%, 27%, 26% and 19% between two serial measurements in a given individual.ConclusionsSubject to the assumption that in neurological disorders NAA, Glx, Cr and Cho changes represent brain-only pathology and not muscles, bone marrow, adipose tissue or epithelial cells, this approach enables us to quantify them, thereby adding specificity to the assessment of the total disease load. This will facilitate monitoring diffuse pathologies with faster measurement, more extensive (~90% of the brain) spatial coverage and sensitivity than localized 1H-MRS.  相似文献   

7.
PurposeTo develop a RF coil system for joint imaging of intracranial and extracranial arterial vessel wall at 3T.Materials and methodThe coil system consists of a 24-channel head coil combined with an 8-channel carotid coil. It is compared with a standard coil configuration (12-channel head coil + 4-channel neck coil + 8-channel carotid coil) for SNR and g-factors in phantoms and healthy volunteers. The clinical relevance of the proposed coil system is also evaluated in patients.ResultsIn phantom experiments, the SNR of the proposed coil system is 53% higher than the maximum SNR of the standard coil configuration at the center of the phantom which usually corresponds to the intracranial region of the head. The g-factors of the proposed coil system in the sagittal plane are lower than the standard coil configuration (by 10.8% and 26.6% for R = 2 and 4 respectively) in the same experiment. In healthy volunteer experiments, 55% of the pixels have SNR above 100 for the proposed coil system, which is 33% more than that of the standard coil configuration. The maximum g-factors in the standard configuration are higher than those from the new coil design by 12% at R = 2 and up to 36% at R = 4 in the sagittal plane. In patients, in-vivo intracranial and extracranial arterial wall images at an isotropic spatial resolution of 0.6 mm can be acquired using the proposed coil system. Plaques are well depicted from the images.ConclusionsThe performance of the proposed coil set is superior to the standard coil configuration, providing high SNR, low g-factor and good spatial coverage needed for simultaneous high resolution imaging of intracranial and extracranial arterial walls. Images acquired in 7.6 min using the proposed coil system can achieve an isotropic spatial resolution of 0.6 mm and can be used to depict plaques on the intracranial and extracranial arterial walls in patients.  相似文献   

8.
PurposeSafe, sensitive, and non-invasive imaging methods to assess the presence, extent, and turnover of myocardial fibrosis are needed for early stratification of risk in patients who might develop heart failure after myocardial infarction. We describe a non-contrast cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) approach for sensitive detection of myocardial fibrosis using a canine model of myocardial infarction and reperfusion.MethodsSeven dogs had coronary thrombotic occlusion of the left anterior descending coronary arteries followed by fibrinolytic reperfusion. CMR studies were performed at 7 days after reperfusion. A CMR spin-locking T1ρ mapping sequence was used to acquire T1ρ dispersion data with spin-lock frequencies of 0 and 511 Hz. A fibrosis index map was derived on a pixel-by-pixel basis. CMR native T1 mapping, first-pass myocardial perfusion imaging, and post-contrast late gadolinium enhancement imaging were also performed for assessing myocardial ischemia and fibrosis. Hearts were dissected after CMR for histopathological staining and two myocardial tissue segments from the septal regions of adjacent left ventricular slices were qualitatively assessed to grade the extent of myocardial fibrosis.ResultsHistopathology of 14 myocardial tissue segments from septal regions was graded as grade 1 (fibrosis area, < 20% of a low power field, n = 9), grade 2 (fibrosis area, 20–50% of field, n = 4), or grade 3 (fibrosis area, > 50% of field, n = 1). A dramatic difference in fibrosis index (183%, P < 0.001) was observed by CMR from grade 1 to 2, whereas differences were much smaller for T1ρ (9%, P = 0.14), native T1 (5.5%, P = 0.12), and perfusion (− 21%, P = 0.05).ConclusionA non-contrast CMR index based on T1ρ dispersion contrast was shown in preliminary studies to detect and correlate with the extent of myocardial fibrosis identified histopathologically. A non-contrast approach may have important implications for managing cardiac patients with heart failure, particularly in the presence of impaired renal function.  相似文献   

9.
ObjectivesTo test the hypothesis that two-dimensional (2D) displacement encoding via stimulated echoes (DENSE) is a reproducible technique for the depiction of segmental myocardial motion in human subjects.Materials and methodsFollowing the approval of the institutional review board (IRB), 17 healthy volunteers without documented history of cardiovascular disease were recruited. For each participant, 2D DENSE were performed twice (at different days) and the images were obtained at basal, midventricular and apical levels of the left ventricle (LV) with a short-axis view. The radial thickening strain (Err), circumferential strain (Ecc), twist and torsion were calculated. The intra-, inter-observer and inter-study variations of DENSE-derived myocardial motion indices were evaluated using coefficient of variation (CoV) and intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC).ResultsIn total, there are 272 pairs of myocardial segments (data points) for comparison. There is good intra- and inter-observer reproducibility for all DENSE-derived measures in 17 participants. There is good inter-study reproducibility for peak Ecc (CoV = 19.64%, ICC = 0.8896, p < 0.001), twist (CoV = 33.11%, ICC = 0.9135, p < 0.001) and torsion (CoV = 13.96%, ICC = 0.8684, p < 0.001). There is moderate inter-study reproducibility for Err (CoV = 38.89%, ICC = 0.7022, p < 0.001).ConclusionDENSE is a reproducible technique for characterizing LV regional systolic myocardial motion on a per-segment basis in healthy volunteers.  相似文献   

10.
PurposeTo investigate the in-vivo precision and clinical feasibility of 3D-QALAS - a novel method for simultaneous three-dimensional myocardial T1- and T2-mapping.MethodsTen healthy subjects and 23 patients with different cardiac pathologies underwent cardiovascular 3 T MRI examinations including 3D-QALAS, MOLLI and T2-GraSE acquisitions. Precision was investigated in the healthy subjects between independent scans, between dependent scans and as standard deviation of consecutive scans. Clinical feasibility of 3D-QALAS was investigated for native and contrast enhanced myocardium in patients. Data were analyzed using mean value and 95% confidence interval, Pearson correlation, Paired t-tests, intraclass correlation and Bland-Altman analysis.ResultsAverage myocardial relaxation time values and SD from eight repeated acquisitions within the group of healthy subjects were 1178 ± 18.5 ms (1.6%) for T1 with 3D-QALAS, 52.7 ± 1.2 ms (2.3%) for T2 with 3D-QALAS, 1145 ± 10.0 ms (0.9%) for T1 with MOLLI and 49.2 ± 0.8 ms (1.6%) for T2 with GraSE.Myocardial T1 and T2 relaxation times obtained with 3D-QALAS correlated very well with reference methods; MOLLI for T1 (r = 0.994) and T2-GraSE for T2 (r = 0.818) in the 23 patients. Average native/post-contrast myocardial T1 values from the patients were 1166.2 ms/411.8 ms for 3D-QALAS and 1174.4 ms/438.9 ms for MOLLI. Average native myocardial T2 values from the patients were 53.2 ms for 3D-QALAS and 54.4 ms for T2-GraSE.ConclusionsRepeated independent and dependent scans together with the intra-scan repeatability, demonstrated all a very good precision for the 3D-QALAS method in healthy volunteers. This study shows that 3D T1 and T2 mapping in the left ventricle is feasible in one breath hold for patients with different cardiac pathologies using 3D-QALAS.  相似文献   

11.
PurposeTo investigate right ventricular (RV) strain in patients without identified cardiac pathology using cardiac magnetic resonance tissue tracking (CMR TT).MethodsA total of 50 consecutive patients with no identified cardiac pathology were analyzed. RV longitudinal and circumferential strain was assessed by CMR TT. The age range was 4–81 years with a median of 32 years (interquartile range, 15 to 56 years).ResultsAnalysis time per patient was < 5 min. The peak longitudinal strain (Ell) was − 22.11 ± 3.51%. The peak circumferential strains (Ecc) for global, basal, mid-cavity and apical segments were as follows: − 11.69 ± 2.25%, − 11.00 ± 2.45%, − 11.17 ± 3.36%, − 12.90 ± 3.34%. There were significant gender differences in peak Ecc at the base (P = 0.04) and the mid-cavity (P = 0.03) with greater deformation in females than in males. On Bland-Altman analysis, peak Ell (mean bias, 0.22 ± 1.67; 95% CI − 3.05 to 3.49) and mid-cavity Ecc (mean bias, 0.036 ± 1.75; 95% CI, − 3.39 to 3.47) had the best intra-observer agreement and inter-observer agreement, respectively.ConclusionsRV longitudinal and circumferential strains can be quickly assessed with good intra-observer and inter-observer variability using TT.  相似文献   

12.
BackgroundThe left ventricle (LV) wall thickness is an important and routinely measured cardiologic parameter. Here we introduce three-dimensional (3D) mapping of LV wall thickness and function using a self-gated magnetic resonance (MR) sequence for ultra-high-field 11.7-T MR cine imaging of mouse hearts.Methods and resultsSix male C57BL/6-j mice were subjected to 11.7-T MR imaging (MRI). Three standard views—short axis, long axis four-chamber, and long axis two-chamber—and eight consecutive short axis scans from the apex to base were performed for each mouse. The resulting 11 self-gated cine images were used for fast low-angle shot analysis with a navigator echo over an observation period of approximately 35 min. The right ventricle (RV) and LV were identified in the short axis and four-chamber views. On 3D color-coded maps, the interventricular septum wall (diastole: 0.94 ± 0.05 mm, systole: 1.20 ± 0.09 mm) and LV free wall (diastole: 1.07 ± 0.15 mm, systole: 1.79 ± 0.11 mm) thicknesses were measured.ConclusionThis 3D wall thickness mapping technique can be used to observe regional wall thickness at the end-diastole and end-systole. Self-gated cine imaging based on ultra-high-field MRI can be used to accurately and easily measure cardiac function and wall thickness in normal mouse hearts. As in the preclinical study, this versatile and simple method will be clinically useful for the high-field-MRI evaluation of cardiac function and wall thickness.  相似文献   

13.
IntroductionTo assess if parameters in intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) can be used to evaluate early renal fibrosis in a mouse model of diabetic nephropathy.Materials & methodsIn a population of 38 male CD1 mice (8 weeks old, 20–30 g), streptozotocin induced diabetes was created in 20 mice via a single intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin at 150 mg/kg, while 18 mice served as control group. IVIM parameters were acquired at 0, 12 and 24 weeks after injection of streptozotocin using a range of b values from 0 to 1200 s/mm2. DTI parameters were obtained using 12 diffusion directions and lower b values of 0, 100 and 400 s/mm2. DTI and IVIM parameters were obtained using region of interests drawn over the renal parenchyma. Histopathological analysis of the right kidney was performed in all mice. Results were analyzed using an unpaired t-test with P < 0.05 considered statistically significant.ResultsRenal cortex fractional anisotropy (FA) was significantly lower in the diabetes group at week 12 as compared with the control group. Renal cortex apparent diffusion coefficient and tissue diffusivity were significantly higher in the diabetes group at week 12 compared with the control group at 12 weeks. Blood flow was significantly decreased at the renal medulla at 24 weeks. Histopathological analysis confirmed fibrosis in the diabetes group at 24 weeks.ConclusionFA is significantly reduced in diabetic nephropathy. FA might serve a potential role in the detection and therapy monitoring of early diabetic nephropathy.  相似文献   

14.
BackgroundPrevious studies have demonstrated a correlation between Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) and Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) metrics, but the conclusions were based on evaluations of the entire cervical spinal cord.ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to quantify the FA and MD values in the spinal cord of NMO patients, separating the lesion sites from the preserved sites, which has not been previously preformed. In addition, we attempted to identify a correlation with EDSS.MethodsDTI was performed in 11 NMO patients and 11 healthy individuals using a 1.5-T MRI scanner. We measured the FA and MD at ROIs positioned along the cervical spinal cord. The mean values of FA and MD at lesion, preserved and spinal cord sites were compared with those of a control group. We tested the correlations between the mean FA and MD with EDSS.ResultsFA in NMO patients was significantly reduced in lesion sites (0.44 vs. 0.55, p = 0.0046), preserved sites (0.46 vs. 0.55, p = 0.0015), and all sites (0.45 vs 0.55, p = 0.0013) while MD increased only in lesion sites (1.03 × 10 3 mm2/s vs. 0.90 × 10 3 mm2/s, p = 0.009). The FA demonstrated the best correlation with EDSS (r =  0.7603, p = 0.0086), particularly at lesion sites.ConclusionsThe results reinforce the importance of the FA index and confirm the hypothesis that NMO is a diffuse disease.  相似文献   

15.
PurposeTo determine if tumor stiffness by MR Elastography (MRE) is associated with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) pathologic features.Material and methodsA retrospective review was undertaken of all patients with pathologically confirmed HCC who underwent MRE prior to loco-regional therapy, surgical resection or transplant between 1/1/2007 to 12/31/2015. An independent observer measured tumor stiffness (kilopascals, kPa) by drawing regions of interest (ROI) covering the HCC and in the case of HCCs with non-enhancing/necrotic components, only the solid portion was included in the ROI. HCC tumor grade (WHO criteria), vascular invasion and tumor encapsulation were assessed from retrievable pathology specimens by an expert hepatobiliary pathologist. Tumor stiffness was compared by tumor grade, size, presence of capsule and vascular invasion using Student's t-test (or Exact Mann-Whitney test).Results21 patients were identified who had pathologically confirmed HCCs and tumor MRE data. 17 patients (81.0%) had underlying chronic liver disease. The mean ± SD tumor size (cm) was 5.3 ± 3.9 cm. The mean ± SD tumor stiffness was 5.9 ± 1.4 kPa. Tumors were graded as well differentiated (N = 2), moderately differentiated (N = 11) and poorly differentiated (N = 8). There was a trend toward increased tumor stiffness in well/moderately differentiated HCCs (6.5 ± 1.2 kPa; N = 13) compared to poorly differentiated HCCs (4.9 ± 1.2 kPa; N = 8) (p < 0.01). There was no significant correlation between tumor stiffness and liver stiffness or tumor size. There was no significant difference in tumor stiffness by presence or etiology of chronic liver disease, vascular invasion or tumor encapsulation.ConclusionPreliminary data suggest that tumor stiffness by MRE may be able to differentiate HCC tumor grade.  相似文献   

16.
《Ultrasonics sonochemistry》2014,21(5):1649-1657
This study reports on the functional properties of 7% flaxseed oil/milk emulsion obtained by sonication (OM) using 20 kHz ultrasound (US) at 176 W for 1–8 min in two different delivery formulae, viz., ready-to-drink (RTD) and lactic acid gel. The RTD emulsions showed no change in viscosity after sonication for up to 8 min followed by storage up to a minimum of 9 days at 4 ± 2 °C. Similarly, the oxidative stability of the RTD emulsion was studied by measuring the conjugated diene hydroperoxides (CD). The CD was unaffected after 8 min of ultrasonic processing. The safety aspect of US processing was evaluated by measuring the formation of CD at different power levels. The functional properties of OM gels were evaluated by small and large scale deformation studies. The sonication process improved the gelation characteristics, viz., decreased gelation time, increased elastic nature, decreased syneresis and increased gel strength. The presence of finer sono-emulsified oil globules, stabilized by partially denatured whey proteins, contributed to the improvements in the gel structure in comparison to sonicated and unsonicated pasteurized homogenized skim milk (PHSM) gels. A sono-emulsification process of 5 min followed by gelation for about 11 min can produce gels of highest textural attibutes.  相似文献   

17.
AimsTo develop a high-resolution, 3D late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique for improved assessment of myocardial scars, and evaluate its performance against 2D breath-held (BH) LGE MRI using a surgically implanted animal scar model in the right ventricle (RV).Methods and resultsA k-space segmented 3D LGE acquisition using CENTRA-PLUS (Contrast ENhanced Timing Robust Acquisition with Preparation of LongitUdinal Signal; or CP) ordering is proposed. 8 pigs were surgically prepared with cardiac patch implantation in the RV, followed in 60 days by 1.5 T MRI. LGE with Phase-Sensitive Inversion Recovery (PSIR) were performed as follows: 1) 2DBH using pneumatic control, and 2) navigator-gated, 3D free-breathing (3DFB)-CP-LGE with slice-tracking. The animal heart was excised immediately after cardiac MR for scar volume quantification. RV scar volumes were also delineated from the 2DBH and 3DFB-CP-LGE images for comparison against the surgical standard. Apparent scar/normal tissue signal-to-noise ratio (aSNR) and contrast-to-noise ratio (aCNR) were also calculated.3DFB-CP-LGE technique was successfully performed in all animals. No difference in aCNR was noted, but aSNR was significantly higher using the 3D technique (p < 0.05). Against the surgical reference volume, the 3DFB-CP-LGE-derived delineation yielded significantly less volume quantification error compared to 2DBH-derived volumes (15 ± 10% vs 55 ± 33%; p < 0.05).ConclusionCompared to conventional 2DBH-LGE, 3DFB-LGE acquisition using CENTRA-PLUS provided superior scar volume quantification and improved aSNR.  相似文献   

18.
This prospective multi-center study aimed to evaluate the inter-vendor and test-retest reliabilities of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (RS-fMRI) by assessing the temporal signal-to-noise ratio (tSNR) and functional connectivity. Study included 10 healthy subjects and each subject was scanned using three 3 T MR scanners (GE Signa HDxt, Siemens Skyra, and Philips Achieva) in two sessions. The tSNR was calculated from the time course data. Inter-vendor and test-retest reliabilities were assessed with intra-class correlation coefficients (ICCs) derived from variant component analysis. Independent component analysis was performed to identify the connectivity of the default-mode network (DMN). In result, the tSNR for the DMN was not significantly different among the GE, Philips, and Siemens scanners (P = 0.638). In terms of vendor differences, the inter-vendor reliability was good (ICC = 0.774). Regarding the test-retest reliability, the GE scanner showed excellent correlation (ICC = 0.961), while the Philips (ICC = 0.671) and Siemens (ICC = 0.726) scanners showed relatively good correlation. The DMN pattern of the subjects between the two sessions for each scanner and between three scanners showed the identical patterns of functional connectivity. The inter-vendor and test-retest reliabilities of RS-fMRI using different 3 T MR scanners are good. Thus, we suggest that RS-fMRI could be used in multicenter imaging studies as a reliable imaging marker.  相似文献   

19.
PurposeIn this study, we aimed to evaluate the feasibility of determining the mural invasion depths of colorectal carcinomas using high-spatial-resolution (HSR) quantitative T2 mapping on a 3-T magnetic resonance (MR) scanner.Materials and methodsTwenty colorectal specimens containing adenocarcinomas were imaged on a 3-T MR system equipped with a 4-channel phased-array surface coil. HSR quantitative T2 maps were acquired using a spin-echo sequence with a repetition time/echo time of 7650/22.6–361.6 ms (16 echoes), 87 × 43.5-mm field of view, 2-mm section thickness, 448 × 224 matrix, and average of 1. HSR fast-spin-echo T2-weighted images were also acquired. Differences between the T2 values (ms) of the tumor tissue, colorectal wall layers, and fibrosis were measured, and the MR images and histopathologic findings were compared.ResultsIn all specimens (20/20, 100%), the HSR quantitative T2 maps clearly depicted an 8-layer normal colorectal wall in which the T2 values of each layer differed from those of the adjacent layer(s) (P < 0.001). Using this technique, fibrosis (73.6 ± 9.4 ms) and tumor tissue (104.2 ± 6.4 ms) could also be clearly differentiated (P < 0.001). In 19 samples (95%), the HSR quantitative T2 maps and histopathologic data yielded the same findings regarding the tumor invasion depth.ConclusionsOur results indicate that 3-T HSR quantitative T2 mapping is useful for distinguishing colorectal wall layers and differentiating tumor and fibrotic tissues. Accordingly, this technique could be used to determine mural invasion by colorectal carcinomas with a high level of accuracy.  相似文献   

20.
PurposeTo compare compressed diffusion spectrum imaging (CS-DSI) with diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in patients with intracranial masses. We hypothesized that CS-DSI would provide superior visualization of the motor and language tracts.Materials and methodsWe retrospectively analyzed 25 consecutive patients with intracranial masses who underwent DTI and CS-DSI for preoperative planning. Directionally-encoded anisotropy maps, and streamline hand corticospinal motor tracts and arcuate fasciculus language tracts were graded according to a 3-point scale. Tract counts, anisotropy, and lengths were also calculated. Comparisons were made using exact marginal homogeneity, McNemar's and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests.ResultsReaders preferred the CS-DSI over DTI anisotropy maps in 92% of the cases, and the CS-DSI over DTI tracts in 84%. The motor tracts were graded as excellent in 80% of cases for CS-DSI versus 52% for DTI; 58% of the motor tracts graded as acceptable in DTI were graded as excellent in CS-DSI (p = 0.02). The language tracts were graded as excellent in 68% for CS-DSI versus none for DTI; 78% of the language tracts graded as acceptable by DTI were graded as excellent by CS-DSI (p < 0.001). CS-DSI demonstrated smaller normalized mean differences than DTI for motor tract counts, anisotropy and language tract counts (p  0.01).ConclusionCS-DSI was preferred over DTI for the evaluation of motor and language white matter tracts in patients with intracranial masses. Results suggest that CS-DSI may be more useful than DTI for preoperative planning purposes.  相似文献   

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