Delayed urea differential enhancement CEST (dudeCEST)‐MRI with T 1 correction for monitoring renal urea handling
Autor: | Moriel H. Vandsburger, Soo Hyun Shin, Michael F. Wendland |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Kidney
Saline infusion medicine.medical_treatment Intraperitoneal injection Aristolochic acid Renal function 030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging 03 medical and health sciences chemistry.chemical_compound 0302 clinical medicine Nuclear magnetic resonance medicine.anatomical_structure chemistry Renal injury medicine Urea Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Saline 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. 85:2791-2804 |
ISSN: | 1522-2594 0740-3194 |
DOI: | 10.1002/mrm.28583 |
Popis: | Purpose We demonstrate a method of delayed urea differential enhancement CEST for probing urea recycling action of the kidney using expanded multi-pool Lorentzian fitting and apparent exchange-dependent relaxation compensation. Methods T1 correction of urea CEST contrast by apparent exchange-dependent relaxation was tested in phantoms. Nine mice were scanned at 7 Tesla following intraperitoneal injection of 2M 150 μL urea, and later saline. T1 maps and Z-spectra were acquired before and 20 and 40 min postinjection. Z-spectra were fit to a 7-pool Lorentzian model for CEST quantification and compared to urea assay of kidney homogenate. Renal injury was induced by aristolochic acid in 7 mice, and the same scan protocol was performed. Results Apparent exchange-dependent relaxation corrected for variable T1 times in phantoms. Urea CEST contrast at +1 ppm increased significantly at both time points following urea injection in the inner medulla and papilla. When normalizing the postinjection urea CEST contrast to the corresponding baseline value, both urea and saline injection resulted in identical fold changes in urea CEST contrast. Urea assay of kidney homogenate showed a significant correlation to both apparent exchange-dependent relaxation (R2 = 0.4687, P = .0017) and non-T1 -corrected Lorentzian amplitudes (R2 = 0.4964, P = .0011). Renal injury resulted in increased T1 time in the cortex and reduced CEST contrast change upon urea and saline infusion. Conclusion Delayed urea enhancement following infusion can provide insight into renal urea handling. In addition, changes in CEST contrast at 1.0 ppm following saline infusion may provide insight into renal function. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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