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Departments of 1 Neuroscience and 2 Physiology, 3 University of Florida Brain Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611; 4 National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Tallahassee, Florida 32310; and Departments of 5 Medicine and 6 Biomedical Engineering, University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama 35294
Myocardial tissue slices were isolated from the
left ventricular free wall (7 slices) and left ventricular papillary
muscle (3 slices) of New Zealand White male rabbits (n = 4) and were subsequently superfused with a modified St. Thomas'
Hospital cardioplegic solution at 19°C. The diffusion-weighted images
were obtained with a 600-MHz nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometer
using diffusion gradient b-values that ranged from 166 to
6,408 s/mm2; the apparent diffusion coefficient of water in
the tissues were subsequently calculated. All of the tissue samples
that were studied exhibited nonmonoexponential diffusion. Data from
seven slices were mathematically fitted by a biexponential expression
with a fast diffusion component of 0.72 ± 0.07 × 10
3 mm2/s, and a slow diffusion component of
0.060 ± 0.033 × 10
3 mm2/s. The
fast component dominated the calculated apparent diffusion coefficient
of the tissue, composed of 82 ± 3% of the overall diffusion-dependent signal decay. Thus myocardial tissue exhibits characteristics consistent with multiple compartments of diffusion. This work has important implications for myocardial diffusion tensor
imaging, as well as the changes in diffusion that have been reported
following myocardial ischemia.
heart; diffusion; nuclear magnetic resonance; magnetic resonance imaging
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