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Investigation of the magnetic susceptibility properties of fresh and fixed mouse heart,liver, skeletal muscle and brain tissue
Institution:1. Institute for Biomedical Engineering, University of Zurich and ETH Zurich, CH-8093 Zurich, Switzerland;2. Zurich Neuroscience Center, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;3. Institute of Geophysics, ETH Zurich, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract:PurposeSeveral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques exploit the difference in magnetic susceptibilities between tissues, but systematic measurements of tissue susceptibility are lacking. Furthermore, there is the question as to whether chemical fixation that is used for ex vivo MRI studies, affects the magnetic properties of the tissue. Here, we determined the magnetic susceptibility and water content of fresh and chemically fixed mouse tissue.MethodsMass susceptibility of brain, heart, liver and skeletal muscle samples were determined on a vibrating sample magnetometer at room temperature. Measurements at 50, 125, 200 and 295 K were performed to assess the temperature dependence of susceptibility. Moreover, we measured water content of fresh and fixed samples.ResultsAll samples show mass susceptibilities between −0.068 and −1.929 × 10−8 m3/kg, compared to −9.338 × 10−9 m3/kg of double distilled water. Heart tissue has a more diamagnetic susceptibility than the other tissues. Compared to fresh tissue, fixed tissue has a less diamagnetic susceptibility. Fixed tissue was not different in water content to fresh tissue and showed no consistent dependence of susceptibility with temperature, whereas fresh tissue shows a decrease to at least 125 K, indicative of a paramagnetic component.ConclusionsBiological tissues are diamagnetic in comparison to water, where the heart is more diamagnetic than the other tissues, with paramagnetic contributions. Fixation rendered tissue less diamagnetic compared to fresh tissue. Our measurements revealed differences in tissue susceptibility between VSM and QSM, inviting more research to compare susceptibility-based MRI methods with physical measurements of tissue susceptibility.
Keywords:Magnetic susceptibility  Magnetic resonance imaging  Mouse organ tissue  Fixation  Paraformaldehyde
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