Mapping complex tissue architecture with diffusion spectrum magnetic resonance imaging

Van J. Wedeen(Harvard University), Patric Hagmann(University Hospital of Lausanne), Wen‐Yih Isaac Tseng(National Taiwan University), Timothy G. Reese(Harvard University), Robert M. Weisskoff(Harvard University)
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
October 24, 2005
Cited by 1,341Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Methods are presented to map complex fiber architectures in tissues by imaging the 3D spectra of tissue water diffusion with MR. First, theoretical considerations show why and under what conditions diffusion contrast is positive. Using this result, spin displacement spectra that are conventionally phase-encoded can be accurately reconstructed by a Fourier transform of the measured signal's modulus. Second, studies of in vitro and in vivo samples demonstrate correspondence between the orientational maxima of the diffusion spectrum and those of the fiber orientation density at each location. In specimens with complex muscular tissue, such as the tongue, diffusion spectrum images show characteristic local heterogeneities of fiber architectures, including angular dispersion and intersection. Cerebral diffusion spectra acquired in normal human subjects resolve known white matter tracts and tract intersections. Finally, the relation between the presented model-free imaging technique and other available diffusion MRI schemes is discussed.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis