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Departments of 1 Radiology and 2 Biomedical Engineering, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio 44195
Received 23 December 1996; accepted in final form 14 May 1997.
Hardy, Peter A., and Guang Yue. Measurement of magnetic
resonance T2 for physiological experiments. J. Appl.
Physiol. 83(3): 904-911, 1997.
The proton transverse relaxation time (T2) of
human skeletal muscles has been increasingly used in magnetic resonance
imaging experiments to examine muscle physiology and neuromuscular
control. However, little attention has been paid to the experimental
factors affecting the accuracy or sensitivity of the T2 measurement. We
have explored theoretically and experimentally the structure of several
magnetic resonance pulse sequences for measuring T2 of the first dorsal
interosseous muscle and found that a multiecho imaging technique using
non-slice-selective refocusing pulses (MENSS) produces more accurate T2
estimates than multiecho slice-selective (MESS) imaging methods that
are commonly used. Using either technique we acquired four
5-mm-thick transverse images of the first dorsal interosseous muscle
with a spatial resolution of 0.6 mm within 5 min. The T2 measured by
the MENSS method was closer to the true T2 than was the T2 estimated by the MESS method. After a given amount of exercise, the MENSS technique revealed an average 28 ± 10% increase in T2 compared with a 13 ± 3% increase measured with an equivalent MESS technique. We
conclude that the MENSS method is a more accurate and sensitive
procedure for studying neuromuscular physiology compared with the more
commonly used MESS method.
muscle activation; exercise physiology; imaging techniques
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