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Origin of orientation‐dependent R 1 (=1/T 1 ) relaxation in white matter
Author(s) -
Schyboll Felix,
Jaekel Uwe,
Petruccione Francesco,
Neeb Heiko
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
magnetic resonance in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.696
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1522-2594
pISSN - 0740-3194
DOI - 10.1002/mrm.28277
Subject(s) - relaxation (psychology) , anisotropy , dipole , orientation (vector space) , nuclear magnetic resonance , white matter , myelin , molecular physics , physics , chemistry , magnetic resonance imaging , geometry , optics , mathematics , radiology , medicine , quantum mechanics , neuroscience , biology , central nervous system , psychology , social psychology
Purpose In a recent MRI study, it was shown that the longitudinal relaxation rate, R 1 , in white matter (WM) is influenced by the relative orientation of nerve fibers with respect to the main magnetic field (B 0 ). Even though the exact nature of this R 1 orientation dependency is still unclear, it can be assumed that the origin of the phenomenon can be attributed to the anisotropic and unique molecular environment within the myelin sheath surrounding the axons. The current work investigates the contribution of dipolar induced R 1 relaxation of the myelin associated hydrogen nuclei theoretically and compares the results with the experimentally observed R 1 orientation dependency. Methods Atomistic molecular dynamics simulations were employed and the R 1 relaxation rate of hydrogen nuclei of a myelin‐alike molecular environment was calculated for various orientations of the trajectory sets relative to the B 0 ‐field. Based on the calculated relaxation rates, the observable R 1 relaxation was simulated for various fiber orientations and fitted to the experimental data using a suitable signal weighting‐scheme. Results The results obtained show that the R 1 relaxation rate of both solid myelin (SM) and myelin water (MW) depends on the fiber orientation relative to the main B 0 ‐field. Moreover, employing a realistic signal weighing scheme and tissue characteristics, the theoretically investigated R 1 orientation dependency matches the experimental data well. Conclusion The good agreement between theoretical and experimental findings indicates that the R 1 orientation dependency in WM mainly originates from anisotropic dipole‐dipole interactions between hydrogen nuclei located within the myelin sheath.