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Novel magnetic resonance technique for characterizing mesoscale structure of trabecular bone
Author(s) -
Chantal Nguyen,
Kimberly J. Schlesinger,
Timothy W. James,
Kristin M. James,
Robert L. Sah,
Koichi Masuda,
Jean M. Carlson
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
royal society open science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2054-5703
DOI - 10.1098/rsos.180563
Subject(s) - mesoscale meteorology , trabecular bone , magnetic resonance imaging , materials science , nuclear magnetic resonance , computer science , physics , medicine , radiology , osteoporosis , pathology , meteorology
Osteoporosis, characterized by increased fracture risk and bone fragility, impacts millions of adults worldwide, but effective, non-invasive and easily accessible diagnostic tests of the disease remain elusive. We present a magnetic resonance (MR) technique that overcomes the motion limitations of traditional MR imaging to acquire high-resolution frequency-domain data to characterize the texture of biological tissues. This technique does not involve obtaining full two-dimensional or three-dimensional images, but can probe scales down to the order of 40 μm and in particular uncover structural information in trabecular bone. Using micro-computed tomography data of vertebral trabecular bone, we computationally validate this MR technique by simulating MR measurements of a ‘ratio metric’ determined from a few k -space values corresponding to trabecular thickness and spacing. We train a support vector machine classifier on ratio metric values determined from healthy and simulated osteoporotic bone data, which we use to accurately classify osteoporotic bone.

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