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 Tagged MR image of rat heart.
MRI visualization of regional contractility and strains of a rat heart can be analyzed in vivo with cardiac tagging.

Pittsburgh NMR Center for Biomedical Research

Contents


Contact Information 

Carnegie Mellon University
4400 5th Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
 
Principal Investigator/Contact
Chien Ho, Ph.D.
Phone: 412-268-3395
Fax: 412-268-7083
 
Contact
T. Kevin Hitchens, Ph.D.
Phone: 412-268-1993

Grant Number

Grant No. EB001977
 

Research Emphasis

The focus of this resource is on developing methodologies for the acquisition of morphological, biochemical, cellular, and functional information in living animals using nuclear magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and spectroscopy (MRS). Novel techniques utilizing multidimensional MR imaging, magnetic resonance microscopy (MRM), and multinuclear in vivo spectroscopy are being applied to a wide range of problems in the biomedical sciences.
 

Current Research

Current research is directed towards the application of MRI and MRS to the study of biomedical problems using small animal models and the development of new MRI hardware and methodology to achieve these goals.
 

Resource Capabilities

Instruments

  • Bruker AVANCE 11.7-T/89-mm vertical bore MRI scanner
  • Bruker BIOSPEC Avance 7.0-T/21-cm MRI scanner
  • Bruker BIOSPEC Avance 4.7-T/40-cm MRI scanner
  • 2.35-T/31-cm MRI/MRS scanner
  • Bruker DRX Avance-300 spectrometer (8.9-cm bore magnet)
  • Bruker DRX Avance-500 spectrometer (5.2-cm bore magnet)
  • Two Bruker DRX Avance-600 spectrometer (5.2-cm vertical bore) NMR spectrometers
  • Bruker Minispec spectrometer (0.47-T)

Special Features

Facilities are available for performing MRI/MRS experiments on living animals, perfused organs, and cell suspensions. The 11.7-T, 7.0-T, and 4.7-T instruments are equipped to maintain animal temperature, monitoring ECG, respiration, and blood pressure in situ.

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References

  1. Kanno S, Lin Wu L-J, Lee PC, Dodd SJ, Williams M, Griffith BP, Ho C. Macrophage accumulation associated with rat cardiac allograft rejection detected by magnetic resonance imaging using ultrasmall superparamagnetifc iron oxide particles. Circulation 2001;104:934-938.
  2. Ye Q, Yang D, Williams M, Williams DS, Pluempitiwiriyawej C, Moura JMF, Ho C. In-vivo detection of acute rat renal allograft rejection by MRI with USPIO particles. Kidney International 2002;61:1124-1135.
  3. Kochanek PM, Hendrich KS, Dixon CE, Schiding JK, Williams DS, Ho C. Cerebral blood flow at one year after controlled cortical impact in rats:  assessment by magnetic resonance imaging. Journal of Neurotrauma 2002;19:1029-11037.

 

Last reviewed on: 12/21/2006

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