In vivo measurement of proton diffusion in the presence of coherent motion.
Measurement of the self-diffusion coefficient D of water in tissue has been performed traditionally using the technique proposed by Stejskal and Tanner. A variant of that technique is shown here, employing flow-compensated gradients that significantly reduce the sensitivity to small coherent motions that are common in body imaging. An interleaved sequence with four values of diffusion-sensitizing gradient (b) minimizes registration errors. Eddy currents and other systematic errors are reduced, permitting the measurement of standards in an imaging context within 5% of nonimaging values in the literature. The flow-compensated sequence permits the measure of D for tissues in the abdominal cavity of the rat. We present in vivo measurements of D for the following rat tissues; liver, kidney (cortex), kidney (medulla) muscle, brain, fat.
Duke Scholars
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- Water
- Rats
- Protons
- Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
- Movement
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Dimethyl Sulfoxide
- Diffusion
- Animals
- Acetone
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Water
- Rats
- Protons
- Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
- Movement
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Dimethyl Sulfoxide
- Diffusion
- Animals
- Acetone