The nuclear spin polarization of the noble gas isotopes 3 He and 129 Xe can be increased using optical pumping methods by four to five orders of magnitude. This extraordinary gain in polarization translates directly into a gain in signal strength for MRI. The new technology of hyperpolarized (HP) gas MRI holds enormous potential for enhancing sensitivity and contrast in pulmonary imaging. This review outlines the physics underlying the optical pumping process, imaging strategies coping with the nonequilibrium polarization, and effects of the alveolar microstructure on relaxation and diffusion of the noble gases. It presents recent progress in HP gas MRI and applications ranging from MR microscopy of airspaces to imaging pulmonary function in patients and suggests potential directions for future developments. MRI has been extremely successful at diagnosing soft tissue disease since its discovery in 1972 (1). However, MRI is not as sensitive in comparison with other biomedical imaging techniques, such as CT, positron-emission tomography, or single-photon emission computed tomography. This is a consequence of a very small signal from a small population difference between nuclear energy states. For a spin-1/2 system, the "nuclear spin polarization", P N , is defined as:where N ϩ and N Ϫ denote populations with magnetic spin quantum numbers ϩ1/2 and Ϫ1/2, respectively. Typically, the thermal energy of the sample at temperature T exceeds the energy difference between the nuclear spin states in a magnetic field B 0 by several orders of magnitude ("hightemperature approximation") and the equilibrium polarization can be written as:where ␥ is the magnetogyric ratio, ប is Planck's constant divided by 2 , and k B is Boltzmann's constant. As an example, P N,0 Ϸ 5 ppm is predicted with Eq.[2] for protons ( 1 H) at body temperature (T ϭ 37°C) and B 0 ϭ 1.5T. In view of the inherent sensitivity problem, increasing the signalto-noise ratio (SNR) has been a field of continuous research since the discovery of NMR. Recently, the use of optically polarized noble gas isotopes 3 He and 129 Xe has attracted increasing interest for use in a variety of promising MR applications. These systems exhibit polarizations exceeding the thermal levels by several orders of magnitude. While the use of such "hyperpolarized" (HP) gases for MRI is a recent development, it is based on a solid foundation of work in atomic physics. The groundwork was laid by Kastler (2) more than 50 years ago by demonstrating transfer of angular momentum from circularly polarized light to the electron and nuclear spins of atoms, a process called "optical pumping" (OP). Since 1991, exploitation of OP as a means of enhancing signal initiated the development of a novel field in NMR (3,4). Research involving HP noble gases has been exceptionally fruitful in biomedical MRI as well as providing applications for investigation of materials (5-8).In the context of proton MRI, the lung is a particularly challenging area to study (9). Even at end expiration, the overall density is ...
The magnetization in hyperpolarized gas (HP) MRI is generated by laser polarization that is independent of the magnet and imaging process. As a consequence, there is no equilibrium magnetization during the image acquisition. The competing processes of gas inflow and depolarization of the spins lead to large changes in signal as one samples k-space. A model is developed of dynamic changes in polarization of hyperpolarized 3He during infusion and in vivo imaging of the lung and verified experimentally in a live guinea pig. Projection encoding is used to measure the view-to-view variation with temporal resolution < 4 ms. Large excitation angles effectively sample the magnetization in the early stages of inflow, highlighting larger airways, while smaller excitation angles produce images of the more distal spaces. The work provides a basis for pulse sequences designed to effectively exploit HP MRI in the lung.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.