This subproject is one of many research subprojects utilizing the resources provided by a Center grant funded by NIH/NCRR. Primary support for the subproject and the subproject's principal investigator may have been provided by other sources, including other NIH sources. The Total Cost listed for the subproject likely represents the estimated amount of Center infrastructure utilized by the subproject, not direct funding provided by the NCRR grant to the subproject or subproject staff. Use the Center for In Vivo Microscopy's 7T system to develop and test iMQC pulse sequences for use on a GE scanner. The research addresses fundamental limitations of MRI and MR spectroscopy (MRS) in vivo, enhancing their utility and enabling new clinical and preclinical applications. MRI and MRS have become very powerful clinical modalities, and applications continue to evolve. However, sensitivity is relatively low, so in most MRI studies, the signal arises mostly from water, and contrast arises primarily from parameters, which often only have indirect clinical relevance or correlation with metabolism and cell biochemistry. Most contrast agents have limited specificity, and usually need to be present in high concentration to affect the signal. Localized detection of other molecules (MRS) is hampered by low concentrations, by competition with the strong water peak, and (in many organs) by local susceptibility variations that broaden resonances and thus reduce selectivity. The research proposed here addresses these fundamental limitations using intermolecular multiple- quantum coherences (iMQCs), both by themselves and with long-lived hyperpolarized reagents. iMQCs correspond to simultaneous spin flips on separated molecules in solution (the separation is typically hundreds of microns). In the previous grant period, we developed methods that significantly strengthen iMQC signals, applications such as temperature imaging where iMQCs have clear advantages, novel contrast agents that amplify the signal from small lung metastases, and approaches that dramatically increase the lifetimes of specific hyperpolarized reagents. Just since October 2008, this work includes two published Science papers and a submitted PNAS paper. This renewal includes specific aims, which exploit these developments, with a focus on targeted clinical applications and localized spectroscopy. The common theme of these applications is high precision spectroscopy, enabled by the intrinsic ability of appropriate iMQC sequences to compensate for susceptibility variations and inhomogeneous broadening. This compensation can be achieved without throwing away chemical shift differences, and the intermolecular coherences can connect molecules which are not in immediate proximity. In organs or tissues with substantial heterogeneity (such as the breast) the line width reductions are dramatic.
The specific aims exploit these characteristics to enable two clinically promising research directions (absolute temperature imaging in hyperthermic therapy and brown adipose tissue detection), to improve proton MRS in fatty tissue, and to enhance the utility of carbon hyperpolarized reagents by detecting sharp lines from water-carbon iMQCs. This work ranges from phantom studies to our participation in an ongoing human clinical trial, and includes innovative pulse sequence development as well as applications of existing sequences.
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