In vivo intermolecular zero-quantum coherence MR spectroscopy in the rat spinal cord at 17.6 T: a feasibility study
David Z. Balla1, 2 and Cornelius Faber1 
| (1) | Department of Experimental Physics 5, University of Würzburg, Am Hubland, 97074 Würzburg, Germany |
| (2) | Present address: Max-Planck-Institute for Biological Cybernetics, 72076 Tübingen, Germany |
Received: 5 April 2007 Revised: 14 August 2007 Accepted: 17 August 2007 Published online: 18 September 2007
Abstract
Results: Well-resolved in vivo spectra showing the four singlet resonances of creatine, choline, and N-acetyl aspartate were obtained with both approaches. iZQC spectra were acquired from larger voxels, but did not provide higher sensitivity or resolution in the healthy spinal cord. In the presence of paramagnetic iron-oxide particles, the quality of in vitro spectra acquired with PRESS declined and was strongly dependent on the quality of the local shim. iZQC spectra were not affected by the presence of iron-oxide particles and provided narrow lines (9 Hz) independent of the shim.
Conclusion: In vivo iZQC spectroscopy of the rat spinal cord is possible. The robustness in presence of local field distortions makes iZQC methods a promising alternative for the investigation of tissue containing labelled cells, implants, or clotted blood. New application of MRS to tissue inaccessible using conventional methods may thus become possible.
Keywords MR spectroscopy - Resolution enhancement - iMQC - DDF - SPIO

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