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Ed. Note: The following is a press
release from New York University.
April 26, 2006 -- New York University's Alexej
Jerschow, an assistant professor of chemistry, and Norbert Müller, a
professor of chemistry at the University of Linz in Austria, have developed
a completely non-invasive imaging method. Their work offers the benefits of
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) while eliminating patients' exposure to
irradiation and setting the stage for the creation of light, mobile MRI
technology. The research, which appears in the latest issue of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), was supported by the
National Science Foundation.
MRI allows clinicians to non-invasively visualize soft tissue in the
interior of the human body through the application of radiofrequency (rf)
irradiation. However, the rf pulses of MRI machines deposit heat in patients
and medical staff, though safety regulations that limit energy deposition
have long been established. Jerschow and Müller have devised a low-energy,
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) technique that does not require external rf-irradiation.
Their technique, instead, relies on the detection of spontaneous, proton
spin-noise in a tightly coupled rf-cavity.
In order to reconstruct spin-noise images that characterize MRI, the
researchers used a commercial, liquid-state NMR spectrometer equipped with a
cryogenically cooled probe. The sample, a phantom of four glass capillaries
filled with mixtures of water and heavy water, remained at room temperature.
The authors inserted the sample into a standard NMR tube and applied a
magnetic field gradient to acquire spatial encoding information. They
collected 30, one-dimensional images, and after applying a projection
reconstruction algorithm, obtained the phantom's two-dimensional image.
Because of its low-energy deposition, Müller and Jerschow's imaging
technique may enable new application areas for magnetic resonance
microscopy. Using already-developed methods, the researchers expect
expansion to three-dimensional imaging to be straightforward.
The same detection scheme is applicable to NMR spectroscopy. Very delicate
samples, such as explosives could be investigated with this method.
Preliminary investigations also predict a sensitivity advantage over
conventional experiments at length scales of millimeters to micrometers,
which may be important in the measurement of NMR spectra within microfluidic
devices.
Very strong magnetic fields, as generally required for MRI and NMR, can be
avoided with the spin-noise detection scheme, making possible the
development of extremely portable and minimally invasive MRI and NMR
instruments.
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