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MRI of thermally denatured blood: methemoglobin formation and relaxation effects
Authors:Farahani K  Saxton R E  Yoon H C  De Salles A A  Black K L  Lufkin R B
Institution:

* Department of Radiological Sciences, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1721, USA

? Division of Surgical Oncology, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1721, USA

? Division of Neurosurgery, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1721, USA

Abstract:Focal regions of T1-shortening have been observed in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-monitored thermal ablations of perfused tissues. The aims of this study were two-fold: to find evidence for heat-induced conversion of hemoglobin (Hb) to methemoglobin (mHb), and to investigate the effects of heat treatment of in-vitro blood components upon their MR relaxation times. Spectrophotometric studies were performed to confirm the heat-induced formation of methemoglobin. Preparations of whole and fractionated blood, previously submitted to elevated temperatures of 40°C to 80°C, were imaged and the relaxation times were calculated. Optical absorption spectra of samples containing free Hb, heated to 60°C, showed increased light absorption at 630 nm, evident of mHb presence. Short T1 values in whole blood (1.13 s) and packed red blood cell (0.65 s) compartments, heated at 60°C, compared to their baseline values (1.62 s and 0.83 s, respectively), were attributed to mHb formation. In relation to MRI-guided thermal interventions, these results suggest a possible explanation for observation of hyperintense regions on T1-weighted images.
Keywords:MRI-guided thermal therapy  Interventional MRI  Blood MRI  Blood thermal denaturation  Methemoglobin  MR relaxation times
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