The influence of radiofrequency (RF) spin-lock pulse on the laminar appearance of articular cartilage in MR images was investigated. Spin-lock MRI experiments were performed on bovine cartilage plugs on a 4.7 Tesla small-bore MRI scanner, and on human knee cartilage in vivo on a 1.5 Tesla clinical scanner. When the normal to the surface of cartilage was parallel to B 0, a typical laminar appearence was exhibited in T 2-weighted images of cartilage plugs, but was absent in T 1ρ-weighted images of the same plugs. At the "magic angle" orientation (when the normal to the surface of cartilage was 54.7° with respect to B0), neither the T2 nor the T1ρ images demonstrated laminae. At the same time, T 1ρ values were greater than T2 at both orientations throughout the cartilage. T1ρ dispersion (i.e., the dependence of the relaxation rate on the spin-lock frequency ω1) was observed, which reached a steady-state value of close to 2 kHz in both parallel and magic-angle orientations. These results suggest that residual dipolar interaction from motionally-restricted water and relaxation processes, such as chemical exchange, contribute to T1ρ dispersion in cartilage. Further, one can reduce the laminar appearance in human articular cartilage by applying spin-lock RF pulses, which may lead to a more accurate diagnosis of degenerative changes in cartilage. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Akella, S. V. S., Regatte, R. R., Wheaton, A. J., Borthakur, A., & Reddy, R. (2004). Reduction of residual dipolar interaction in cartilage by spin-lock technique. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 52(5), 1103–1109. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.20241
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