Temperature dependence of relaxation times in proton components of fatty acids

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Abstract

We examined the temperature dependence of relaxation times in proton components of fatty acids in various samples in vitro at 11 tesla as a standard calibration data for quantitative temperature imaging of fat. The spin-lattice relaxation time, T 1, of both the methylene (CH 2) chain and terminal methyl (CH 3) was linearly related to temperature (r>0.98, P<0.001) in samples of animal fat. The temperature coefficients for the 2 primary proton components differed significantly; in 5 bovine fat samples, the coefficient at 30°C was 1.79 ±0.07 (%/°C) for methylene and 2.98±0.38 (%/°C) for methyl. Numerical simulations based on such a difference demonstrated the possibility of considerable error from inconsistent ratios in fatty acid components when calibrating and estimating temperature. The error reached 3.3°C per 15°C in temperature elevation when we used a pure CH 2 signal for calibration and observed the signal with 18% of CH 3 to estimate temperature. These findings suggested that separating the fatty acid components would significantly improve accuracy in quantitative thermometry for fat. Use of the T 1 of CH 2 seems promising in terms of reliability and reproducibility in measuring temperature of fat.

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Kuroda, K., Iwabuchi, T., Obara, M., Honda, M., Saito, K., & Imai, Y. (2011). Temperature dependence of relaxation times in proton components of fatty acids. Magnetic Resonance in Medical Sciences, 10(3), 177–183. https://doi.org/10.2463/mrms.10.177

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