Journal of Applied Physiology
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J Appl Physiol 94: 1641-1649, 2003. First published November 27, 2002; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00841.2002
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Vol. 94, Issue 4, 1641-1649, April 2003

INNOVATIVE TECHNIQUES
Brain temperature measured by 1H-NMR in conjunction with a lanthanide complex

Hubert K. F. Trübel1,2, Paul K. Maciejewski2,3, Jacqueline H. Farber4, and Fahmeed Hyder2,5,6

Departments of 1 Pediatrics, 2 Diagnostic Radiology, 3 Psychiatry, 4 Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, 5 Biomedical Engineering, and 6 Section of Bioimaging Sciences, Magnetic Resonance Research Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510

In vivo data on temperature distributions in the intact brain are scarce, partly due to lack of noninvasive methods for the region of interest. NMR has been exploited for probing a variety of brain activities in vivo noninvasively within the region of interest. Here we report the use of a thulium-based thermometric sensor, infused through the blood, for monitoring absolute temperature in rat brain in vivo by 1H-NMR and validated by direct temperature measurements with thermocouple wires. Because the 1H chemical shifts also demonstrate pH sensitivity, detection of multiple resonances was used to measure both temperature and pH simultaneously with high sensitivity. Examination of blood plasma and cerebral spinal fluid samples removed from rats infused with the thermometric sensor suggests that the complex, despite its negative charge, crosses the blood-brain barrier to enter the extracellular milieu. In the future, the thulium-based thermometric sensor may be used for monitoring temperature (and pH) distributions throughout the entire brain, examining response to therapy and evaluating changes induced by alterations in neuronal activity.

metabolism; neural activity; perfusion; shift reagent; thulium


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