4.3 Article

An advanced phantom study assessing the feasibility of neuronal current imaging by ultra-low-field NMR

Journal

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE
Volume 237, Issue -, Pages 182-190

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmr.2013.10.011

Keywords

Neuronal currents; Current dipole phantom; Ultra-low-field NMR; MEG

Funding

  1. Federal Ministry of Education and Research of Germany
  2. Bernstein Focus Neurotechnology [01GQ0852]
  3. Academy of Finland

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In ultra-low-field (ULF) NMR/MRI, a common scheme is to magnetize the sample by a polarizing field of up to hundreds of mT, after which the NMR signal, precessing in a field on the order of several mu T, is detected with superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs). In our ULF-NMR system, we polarize with up to 50 mT and deploy a single-stage DC-SQUID current sensor with an integrated input coil which is connected to a wire-wound Nb gradiometer. We developed this system (white noise 0.50 fT root Hz) for assessing the feasibility of imaging neuronal currents by detecting their effect on the ULF-NMR signal. Magnetoencephalography investigations of evoked brain activity showed neuronal dipole moments below 50 nAm. With our instrumentation, we have studied two different approaches for neuronal current imaging. In the so-called DC effect, long-lived neuronal activity shifts the Larmor frequency of the surrounding protons. An alternative strategy is to exploit fast neuronal activity as a tipping pulse. This so-called AC effect requires the proton Larmor frequency to match the frequency of the neuronal activity, which ranges from near-DC to similar to kHz. We emulated neuronal activity by means of a single dipolar source in a physical phantom, consisting of a hollow sphere filled with an aqueous solution of CuSO4 and NaCl. In these phantom studies, with physiologically relevant dipole depths, we determined resolution limits for our set-up for the AC and the DC effect of similar to 10 mu Am and similar to 50 nAm, respectively. Hence, the DC effect appears to be detectable in vivo by current ULF-NMR technology. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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