In vivo quantification of the bound pool T1 in human white matter using the binary spin–bath model of progressive ...

In vivo quantification of the bound pool T1 in human white matter using the binary spin–bath model of progressive magnetization transfer saturation
Gunther Helms and Gisela E Hagberg
Physics in Medicine and Biology, 2009; 54(23):N529-40

Abstract

The relative size and relaxation of the invisible pool of bound spins (T1b) underlying magnetization transfer (MT) was quantified in eight subjects in vivo at 1.5 T from progressive saturation experiments using repetitive MT pulses. The evolution of the binary spin–bath was sampled by increasing the repetition period from 8 to 200 ms. Single-shot echo-planar images at TE = 50 ms were evaluated in the central white matter. Three models were fitted: the general solution, and with constraints of equal relaxation and T1b = 1 s for the invisible pool. The general solution of unconstrained T1b provided a significantly better fit, indicating fast-to-intermediate exchange. The bound pool fraction was 17 ± 4%, the relaxation times T1f = 1.6 ± 0.2 s for free water and T1b = 171 ± 22 ms for the bound pool. The constrained models did not differ from each other, since here T1b was similar to the observed T1 of 1.1 ± 0.1 s. They underestimate the bound pool fraction and its relaxation. Thus, the standard assumption of continuous-wave MT models may underestimate the relaxation via the bound pool by more than a factor of five.