Abstract

BackgroundAs an object’s electrical passive property, the electrical conductivity is proportional to the mobility and concentration of charged carriers that reflect the brain micro-structures. The measured multi-b diffusion-weighted imaging (Mb-DWI) data by controlling the degree of applied diffusion weights can quantify the apparent mobility of water molecules within biological tissues. Without any external electrical stimulation, magnetic resonance electrical properties tomography (MREPT) techniques have successfully recovered the conductivity distribution at a Larmor-frequency.MethodsThis work provides a non-invasive method to decompose the high-frequency conductivity into the extracellular medium conductivity based on a two-compartment model using Mb-DWI. To separate the intra- and extracellular micro-structures from the recovered high-frequency conductivity, we include higher b-values DWI and apply the random decision forests to stably determine the micro-structural diffusion parameters.ResultsTo demonstrate the proposed method, we conducted phantom and human experiments by comparing the results of reconstructed conductivity of extracellular medium and the conductivity in the intra-neurite and intra-cell body. The phantom and human experiments verify that the proposed method can recover the extracellular electrical properties from the high-frequency conductivity using a routine protocol sequence of MRI scan.ConclusionWe have proposed a method to decompose the electrical properties in the extracellular, intra-neurite, and soma compartments from the high-frequency conductivity map, reconstructed by solving the electro-magnetic equation with measured B1 phase signals.

Highlights

  • As an object’s electrical passive property, the electrical conductivity is proportional to the mobility and concentration of charged carriers that reflect the brain micro-structures

  • A two compartment model is the simplest form, the determination of micro-structural parameters from measured decay MR DWI signals with respect to b-value is ill-posed because the estimation of parameters from the combination of smooth exponential curves is sensitive to noise in the measured DWI data

  • We have proposed a method to decompose the electrical properties in the extracellular, intra-neurite, and soma compartments from the high-frequency conductivity map, reconstructed by solving the electro-magnetic equation with measured B1 phase signals

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Summary

Introduction

As an object’s electrical passive property, the electrical conductivity is proportional to the mobility and concentration of charged carriers that reflect the brain micro-structures. Without any external electrical stimulation, magnetic resonance electrical properties tomography (MREPT) techniques have successfully recovered the conductivity distribution at a Larmor-frequency. Using a conventional MRI scanner without any external electrical stimulation, magnetic resonance electrical properties tomography (MREPT) techniques have been developed and successfully recover the conductivity distribution at Larmor-frequency (about 128 MHz at 3 T ) [1,2,3,4]. The electrical conductivity of biological tissues is proportional to the apparent concentration and mobility of ions in the intracellular and extracellular compartments. As the separated form of electrical conductivity of biological tissues, the low-frequency conductivity (< 1 kHz) is dominantly influenced by the apparent concentration and mobility of ions in the extracellular compartment. To stabilize the ill-posedness, two compartment models typically assume some restrictions: intrinsic diffusivity and/or water diffusing in elongated cellular fibres, based on the ball-and-stick model [10, 11]

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