Abstract

Many NMR measurements of cardiac microcirculation (perfusion, intramyocardial blood volume) depend on some kind of assumption of intracapillary-extravascular water exchange rate, e.g., fast exchange. The magnitude of this water exchange rate, however, is still unknown. The intention of this study was to determine a lower limit for this exchange rate by investigating the effect of perfusion on relaxation time. Studies were performed in the isolated perfused cardioplegic rat heart. After slice-selective inversion, the spin lattice relaxation rate of myocardium within the slice was studied as a function of perfusion and compared with a mathematical model which predicts relaxation rate as a function of perfusion and intracapillary-extravascular exchange rate. A linear relationship was found between relaxation rate T(-1) and perfusion P normalized by perfusate/tissue partition coefficient of water, lambda: deltaT(-1) = m x deltaP/lambda with 0.82 < or = m < or = 1.06. Insertion of experimental data in the model revealed that a lower bound of the exchange rate from intra- to extravascular space is 6.6 s(-1) (4.5 s(-1), P < 0.05), i.e., the intracapillary lifetime of a water molecule is less than 150 ms (222 ms, P < 0.05). Based on this finding, the T1 mapping after slice-selective inversion could become a valuable noncontrast NMR method to measure variations of perfusion.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call