Abstract

The values of equivalent cross-relaxation rate (ECR) correlated well with [i] water conditions in various copolymer gels and [ii] nature of malignant cells with regard to nuclear dysplasia and mitotic potential in breast carcinomas. The synthetic copolymer gels composed of any two or three monomers among 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate (HEMA), glycidyl methacrylate (GMA), N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidinone (N-VP), methyl methacrylate (MMA) and benzyl methacrylate (BMA). The ECR measurement was performed by using an off-resonance saturation pulse under conventional field-echo imaging at frequency within ± 75 ppm apart from the water resonance frequency. The ECR values were readily to determine and non-time consuming parameter for cross relaxation rate. The ECR values at the frequency offset by 7-ppm (ECR-7) were divided the sample gels two classes, which must correspond to hydrophilic or hydrophobic ones. The sensitivity in the gels was nearly equivalent to the cross-relaxation rate itself. In the breast carcinomas, the ECR-7 correlates with the nature of malignant cells with regard to nuclear dysplasia and mitotic potential. The ECR-7 is better or more accurate than the STR-7 because the SDNRs between carcinoma and glandular tissue increased by approximately 50% on the ECR-7 compared with the STR-7. Thus the ECR values could be a new parameter for malignancy and cell proliferative activity of the breast carcinomas with non-invasive modalities by magnetic resonance imaging.

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