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Imaging Renal Urea Handling in Rats at Millimeter Resolution using Hyperpolarized Magnetic Resonance Relaxometry

Authors :
Reed, Galen D.
von Morze, Cornelius
Verkman, Alan S.
Koelsch, Bertram L.
Chaumeil, Myriam M.
Lustig, Michael
Ronen, Sabrina M.
Sands, Jeff M.
Larson, Peder E. Z.
Wang, Zhen J.
Larsen, Jan Henrik Ardenkjær
Kurhanewicz, John
Vigneron, Daniel B.
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
arXiv, 2015.

Abstract

\textit{In vivo} spin spin relaxation time ($T_2$) heterogeneity of hyperpolarized \textsuperscript{13}C urea in the rat kidney was investigated. Selective quenching of the vascular hyperpolarized \textsuperscript{13}C signal with a macromolecular relaxation agent revealed that a long-$T_2$ component of the \textsuperscript{13}C urea signal originated from the renal extravascular space, thus allowing the vascular and renal filtrate contrast agent pools of the \textsuperscript{13}C urea to be distinguished via multi-exponential analysis. The $T_2$ response to induced diuresis and antidiuresis was performed with two imaging agents: hyperpolarized \textsuperscript{13}C urea and a control agent hyperpolarized bis-1,1-(hydroxymethyl)-1-\textsuperscript{13}C-cyclopropane-$^2\textrm{H}_8$. Large $T_2$ increases in the inner-medullar and papilla were observed with the former agent and not the latter during antidiuresis suggesting that $T_2$ relaxometry may be used to monitor the inner-medullary urea transporter (UT)-A1 and UT-A3 mediated urea concentrating process. Two high resolution imaging techniques - multiple echo time averaging and ultra-long echo time sub-2 mm$^3$ resolution 3D imaging - were developed to exploit the particularly long relaxation times observed.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....52eb2b1c5c162570b65a37536ff7b775
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1511.00200