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High-resolution 3D MRI of mouse brain reveals small cerebral structures in vivo
ISSN
0165-0270
Date Issued
2002
DOI
10.1016/s0165-0270(02)00211-x
Abstract
This work demonstrates technical approaches to high-quality magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of small structures of the mouse brain in vivo. It turns out that excellent soft-tissue contrast requires the reduction of partial volume effects by using 3D MRI at high (isotropic) resolution with linear voxel dimensions of about 100–150 μm. The long T2 relaxation times at relatively low magnetic fields (2.35 T) offer the benefit of a small receiver bandwidth (increased signal-to-noise) at a moderate echo time which together with the small voxel size avoids visual susceptibility artifacts. For measuring times of 1–1.5 h both T1-weighted (FLASH) and T2-weighted (Fast Spin-Echo) 3D MRI acquisitions exhibit detailed anatomical insights in accordance with histological sections from a mouse brain atlas. Preliminary applications address the identification of neuroanatomical variations in different mouse strains and the use of Mn2+ as a T1 contrast agent for neuroaxonal tracing of fiber tracts within the mouse visual pathway.