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Durgesh Kumar DwivediDepartment of NMR & MRI
AIIMS, New Delhi, IndiaMTI Theory and Application
Contents Magnetization Transfer (MT)
T1 and T2 Relaxation in tissue
The physical basis of magnetization transfer
Attempts for quantification using MTR
Theoretical approach of MTR & Pulse sequence
Clinical Applications
Conclusion
MTI Theory and Application
Fundamental
Larmor Equation: ω= γ Bo
MTI Theory and Application
T1 relaxation
A radio frequency (RF) pulse is applied (an oscillating electromagnetic wave) to the system at exactly the Larmor frequency of the precessing spin (‘on-resonance’). For hydrogen atoms this RF pulse has a frequency of 64 MHz for a magnetic field of 1.5 T.
T1 is a characteristic of tissue and is defined as the time that it takes for the longitudinal magnetization to reach 63% of its final value
MTI Theory and Application
T2 relaxation
T2 is the transverse relaxation time (or spin-spin relaxation time) and describes the disappearance of transverse magnetization
Definition of T2 rel.: T2 is a characteristic of tissue and is defined as the time that it takes the transverse magnetization to decrease to 37% of its starting value.
Bloch Equations
The signal intensity (SI) in the case of a simple tissue, only reflecting T1 and T2 relaxation. N(1H) is the proton density (PD).
Discovered accidentally : MT Magnetization transfer (MT) was first discovered accidentally by Wolff and Balaban (Wolff and Balaban 1989)
They were trying to perform a spin transfer experiment by selective saturation of urea and were looking for a small signal suppression in water
Instead they found a significant loss of image intensity
This generalized signal suppression, now known as MT
MTI Theory and Application
Physical Basis of Magnetization Transfer
Magnetization transfer (MT) imaging is an MRI technique that generates contrast dependent on the phenomenon of magnetization exchange between ‘free water’ protons and protons that are ‘restricted’ in macromolecules
MTI Theory and Application
MT- unique contrast
MTI Theory and Application
How MT works???Proton MRI detects signal only from mobile protons which have sufficiently long T2 relaxation times (~10 ms)The T2 of the less mobile protons associated with macromolecules and membranes in biological tissues are too short (< 1 ms) to be detected directly in MRI
MTI Theory and Application
Figure shows: Magnetization transfer between restricted protons (part of a macromolecule) and free protons in the surface layer
Coupling between the macromolecular protons and the mobile or ‘liquid’ protons allows the spin state of the macromolecular protons to influence the spin state of the liquid protons through exchange processes
Concept of MT
When an RF pulse is applied far enough off resonance, it will saturate the restricted protons without directly affecting the liquid protons
The macromolecular spins have a much broader absorption lineshape than the liquid spins
Making macromolecular spins as much as 106 times more sensitive to an appropriately placed off-resonance irradiation.
Fig: Absorption lineshapes of the free protons (liquid pool) and restricted protons (macromolecular pool).
This preferential saturation of the macromolecular spins can be transferred to the liquid spins, depending on the rate of exchange between the two spin populations, and hence can be detected with MRI
Continuous wave vs Pulsed wave MT
Continuous wave (CW) saturation transfer techniques were the first used to demonstrate MT effects in tissue (Henkelman et al. 1993)
Pulsed wave (PW) saturation techniques achieve selective saturation of the restricted proton resonance using either brief off-resonance RF pulses (applied at a frequency that is off-set from the free water resonance) or on-resonance (applied near the ‘free’ water resonance). (Sled et al. 2000)
MTI Theory and Application
For practical imaging experiments, pulsed wave is preferred. Due to specific absorption rate (SAR) and RF transmitters
Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) Measures of the rate at which energy is absorbed by the body when exposed to a RF field. It is defined as the power absorbed per mass of tissue
The radio frequency energy from an imaging sequence can cause heating of the tissues of the body
The USFDA recommends that the exposure to RF energy be limited. SAR is the limiting measure [(SAR) = Joules of RF/second/kg of body weight = Watts/kg]
MTI Theory and Application
The SAR for the whole body must be less than 0.4 W/kg . It must be less than 3.2 W/kg averaged over the head. All sequences are made according to guidelines
Two pool model: Theoretical approach
MTI Theory and Application
Two-pool model of MT exchange. The shaded region in each pool represents saturated spins. RA & RB represent longitudinal relaxation rates (R=1/T) in liquid and macromolecule pools, respectively. R is MT exchange between the pools. A- Liquid pool, B- semisolid pool; M is no. of spins
Understanding: Two pool model
In tissues, the number of macromolecular spins is much less than the liquid spins and the relative fraction is given by M0B
Number of spins in “A” compartment (M0A) is by convention normalized to unity
Unshaded portion: Longitudinal orientation
Shaded portion: Saturated spins
MTI Theory and Application
Two pool model contd…
The effect of off-resonance irradiation on this system is different for the two pools
During off-resonance irradiation:
Effe. saturation rate = [Prob. of absorption]at Δ * [Avg. RF power]at Δ
MTI Theory and Application
Δ = offset frequency
Two pool model contd…In MT experiments, the intent is to manipulate the liquid pool indirectly by saturating the macromolecular pool
During off-resonance: liquid pool like rotating frame of reference
Beff = B1 + Δ/γ; where Δ = ωrf – ωo (~2kHz)
MTI Theory and Application
MT Theory contd…The most important process in MT is the exchange between the macromolecular pool and the liquid pool
It is this exchange that transfers macromolecular saturation to the liquid pool, resulting in decreased longitudinal magnetization being available for imaging
This spin exchange can occur via dipolar coupling or via direct chemical exchange
MTI Theory and Application
Pulse sequence
The CW case gives a simplification of the Bloch equations. The magnetization as a function of the frequency offset is obtained
In case of PW: during one period (TR) a Gaussian RF pulse, which is applied off-resonance, is followed by an excitation pulse (figure below), after which the signal is read out
MTI Theory and Application
Quantitative Imaging: MT & MTR Two main advantages over conventional MR:
Provides morphological and pathological It enables us to asses “invisible lesion” burden in so called normal appearing white matter (NAWM)
Quantitatively magnetization transfer ratio (MTR) is given by
MTI Theory and Application
MTR Image Generation
MTI Theory and Application
Composition of an MTR image (FLASH3D) of an MS patient from a T1-weighted image without (M0) and with MT pre-pulse (Ms).
Influence of different factors on MTLack of uniformity of the MTR ratios. It can be assumed that the majority of variations in resulting MTR values is due to the degree of MT saturation experienced within a particular tissue region
Certain features of the MR system that influence the degree of MT saturation are fixed, e.g. strength of the B0 field, coil hardware, prescan function; other features may be varied
With respect to the B0 field, the influence of field inhomogeneities should be taken into account: shimming can decrease this problem
The parameters that determine the MTR values can be classified in three groups: tissue properties, system parameters and data processing
MTI Theory and Application
Influence of different factors on MTTissue properties: different tissues exhibit different degrees of magnetization transfer
decreased MTR values may reflect demyelination or axonal loss; For off-resonance saturation transfer techniques, unwanted direct saturation effects play an important role, because off-resonance pulses also saturate the free pool directly
System parameters: The amplitude, shape and duration of the MT saturation pulse and the interpulse interval determine the degree of saturation of both the free and restricted protons. Other factors: TR, TE, excitation flip angle, etc
MTI Theory and Application
• MTR data processing: A shift of 1 mm or less due to patient motion may be enough to render invalid the calculated MTR value. At tissue interfaces (e.g. between grey and white matter, white matter and CSF, or lesion and adjacent unaffected tissue),
Experimental demonstration
Fig. shows the same MT for 4% agar at a single B1 amplitude frequency of 0.67 kHz.
The shaded region shows the amount of saturation coming from saturated agar spins exchanging with the water spins
MTI Theory and Application
Where Ksat: rate constant; T1SAT is the time constant for the two pools to come to equilibrium during irradiation
Clinical application contd… Multiple sclerosis: Because of the demyelinating character of MS, MT imaging, which is sensitive to the presence of restricted protons, is a very useful method to monitor the destruction
MTI Theory and Application
Normalized MTR for the whole brain of a healthy individual (dotted line) and a patient with MS (MS, solid line). The MS patient exhibits reduced peak MTR value and a lager proportion of brain pixels with low MTR values reflecting lesion In whole brain
Applications contd…Magnetic resonance angiography
MTI Theory and Application
MR angio at 3T with MT suppression of brain tissue of 7-16% across image.
Applications contd… Optic neuritis
MTI Theory and Application
Magnetization transfer image of a patient with right optic neuritis shows that the affected optic nerve has a dramatically lower MTR (20.1%) compared with that of the contralateral nerve (47.7%). This suggests structure loss of myelin as opposed to just edema.
Applications contd…Breast Cancer
MTI Theory and Application
MTR:Benign Lesions: 19.02±3.40 Malignant Lesions: 14.77±2.19 at 1.5T
BL (22.8 ± 4.2) and ML (19.9 ± 3.5) at 3T
There are molecules secreted only by cancerous cells, Fibronectin, collagen type IV, and laminin are among the most frequent proteins related to stromal and cancer growth
Applications contd… Prostate cancer
MTI Theory and Application
(A)T2-weighted image; (B) T2-weighted image showing the ROIs for the calculation MTR; (C) image without MT pulse; and (D) image with MT pulse.
Cancer: MTR value (8.29±3.49) and controls: MTR was 6.18±1.63
Conclusions & Future directions MT provides unique contrast
MT has shown its value in MRA and white matter disease and holds continuing promise for use in imaging other tissues and diseases
Could improve image specificity (MTR)
Attention: field inhomogeneities, pulse sequence parameters, reproducibility etc.
MTI Theory and Application
MTI Theory and Application
Thank you