Abstract
In vivo 23Na magnetic resonance images of guinea pig kidney were obtained at 2.1 T using a spin-echo sequence with an echo time of 19 ms. The intact kidney showed a very strong signal intensity in the sodium image. The signal intensity of the kidney decreased to 55% after ligation of the renal artery together with the vein and the ureter. The total sodium content in the excised kidney after arterial occlusion, measured by flame photometry, was 24% higher than that in the intact kidney. The transverse relaxation time (T2) of the extracellular sodium in the isolated kidney decreased to one-third of that in the intact kidney. This shortening of T2 may be partly responsible for the decrease in the 23Na signal intensity from the kidney after arterial occlusion.
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