Effect of intercompartmental water exchange on the apparent myelin water fraction in multiexponential T2 measurements of rat spinal cord

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Abstract

The myelin water fraction has been used as a quantitative measure of the amount of myelin present in tissue. However, recent work has suggested that intercompartmental exchange of water between myelin and nonmyelin compartments may cause the myelin water fraction to underestimate the true myelin content of tissue. In this work, multiexponential T2 experiments were performed in vivo within the rat spinal cord, and a wide variation of the myelin water fraction (10-35%) was measured within four rat spinal cord tracts with similar myelin content. A numerical simulation based upon segmented histology images was used to quantitatively account for T2 variations between tracts. The model predicts that a difference in exchange between the four spinal cord tracts, mediated by a difference in the average axon radius and myelin thickness, is sufficient to account for the variation in myelin water fraction measured in vivo. Copyright © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Harkins, K. D., Dula, A. N., & Does, M. D. (2012). Effect of intercompartmental water exchange on the apparent myelin water fraction in multiexponential T2 measurements of rat spinal cord. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 67(3), 793–800. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.23053

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