Sodium-23 magnetic resonance imaging of the eye and lens.

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RESUMO

In order to develop a better understanding of cataract and to evaluate the effectiveness of potential drugs, noninvasive techniques must be devised to detect early metabolic changes. As a prelude to these goals, sodium-23 imaging experiments operating at 29.8 MHz (2.7 teslas) were performed on the bovine eye and lens. A spatially localized transverse relaxation time (T2)-weighted spin-density map of the sodium-23 within the lens is presented, with a resolution better than 250 micron. Due to the presence of short-T2 (3 msec) components within the lens, only the use of the planar-integral projection reconstruction (PPR) imaging scheme allowed sufficiently short echo-times (1 msec) to permit sodium-23 signal detection. These noninvasive imaging results show differences in the apparent sodium concentration within the lens that are consistent with separate, invasive measurements of sodium concentration. Separate analysis (with no spatial localization) at 79.4 MHz (7.2 teslas), using a shift reagent (dysprosium) to distinguish extracellular from intracellular sodium, indicates that approximately 62% of the detected sodium-23 signal is intracellular. These results are consistent with observations based on invasive measurements and further support the existence of the pump-leak system and a sodium gradient within the lens.

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