Warming up for Magnetic Resonance Imaging

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In the technique known as temperature-controlled molecular depolarization gates an atom of hyperpolarized xenon from the pool at left enters a cryptophane cage center which is part of a biosensor attached to a specific molecular target. A burst of tu ...
In the technique known as "temperature-controlled molecular depolarization gates," an atom of hyperpolarized xenon from the pool at left enters a cryptophane cage, center, which is part of a biosensor attached to a specific molecular target. A burst of tuned rf energy depolarizes the xenon, which is then ejected back into the pool by chemical exchange with the next incoming xenon atom. Depolarized xenon (right) stands out in the larger hyperpolarized pool and thus enhances the contrast of the nearby target molecule. At top, a phantom half-filled with agarose beads, to which biosensors are attached, shows how image contrast can be enhanced and controlled by temperature: a 6-K temperature increase quickly depolarizes the xenon in the vicinity of the target beads.

Standard magnetic resonance imaging, MRI, is a superb diagnostic tool but one that suffers from low sensitivity, requiring patients to remain motionless for long periods of time inside noisy, claustrophobic machines. A promising new MRI method, much faster, more selective — able to distinguish even among specific target molecules — and many thousands of times more sensitive, has now been developed in the laboratory by researchers at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of California at Berkeley.


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All News summaries for May 08, 2008

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