Imaging brain vasculature with BOLD microscopy: MR detection limits determined by in vivo two-photon microscopy

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Abstract

Rat brain vasculature was imaged at 9.4T with blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) microscopy. Data were acquired without exogenous contrast agent in <35 min using 3D gradient-echo imaging with 78-μm isotropic resolution. Detailed vascular patterns including intracortical veins and some branches were observed in simple magnitude-contrast data acquired at an experimentally optimized echo time. The venous origin of the dark patterns was confirmed by oxygenation-dependent studies, and when the systemic arterial oxygen saturation level was <80% BOLD microscopy revealed additional intracortical vessels presumed to be of arterial origin. Quantification shows a decrease of intracortical venous density with depth. The full width at half-minimum intensity was 90-190 μm for most intracortical venous vessels identifiable by BOLD venography. Since actual diameters are not directly quantifiable by BOLD, we also measured diameter-dependent intracortical venous density in vivo by two-photon excitation fluorescent microscopy. Density comparisons between the two modalities, along with computer simulations, show that venous vessels as small as ≈16-30 μm diameter are detectable with 9.4T BOLD microscopy under our experimental conditions. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Park, S. H., Masamoto, K., Hendrich, K., Kanno, I., & Kim, S. G. (2008). Imaging brain vasculature with BOLD microscopy: MR detection limits determined by in vivo two-photon microscopy. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 59(4), 855–865. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.21573

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