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      Quantitative Sodium MR Imaging of the Human Brain at 9.4 Tesla provides Assessment of Tissue Sodium Concentration and Cell Volume Fraction during Normal Ageing

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          Abstract

          Sodium ion homeostasis is a fundamental property of viable tissue, allowing the tissue sodium concentration to be modeled as the tissue cell volume fraction. The modern neuropathology literature using ex vivo tissue from selected brain regions indicates that human brain cell density remains constant during normal aging and attributes the volume loss that occurs with advancing age to changes in neuronal size and dendritic arborization. Quantitative sodium MRI performed with the enhanced sensitivity of ultrahigh-field 9.4 T has been used to investigate tissue cell volume fraction during normal aging. This cross-sectional study (n = 49; 21-80 years) finds that the in vivo tissue cell volume fraction remains constant in all regions of the brain with advancing age in individuals who remain cognitively normal, extending the ex vivo literature reporting constant neuronal cell density across the normal adult age range. Cell volume fraction, as measured by quantitative sodium MRI, is decreased in diseases of cell loss, such as stroke, on a time scale of minutes to hours, and in response to treatment of brain tumors on a time scale of days to weeks. Neurodegenerative diseases often have prodromal periods of decades in which regional neuronal cell loss occurs prior to clinical presentation. If tissue cell volume fraction can detect such early pathology, this quantitative parameter may permit the objective measurement of preclinical disease progression. This current study in cognitively normal aging individuals provides the basis for the pursuance of investigations directed towards such neurodegenerative diseases.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          8915233
          1782
          NMR Biomed
          NMR Biomed
          NMR in biomedicine
          0952-3480
          1099-1492
          13 May 2015
          09 June 2015
          February 2016
          01 February 2017
          : 29
          : 2
          : 137-143
          Affiliations
          University of Illinois at Chicago, Center for MR Research, Chicago, IL, USA
          Royal Melbourne Hospital, Radiology, Parkville, Vic., Australia
          University of Illinois at Chicago, Center for MR Research, Chicago, IL, USA
          University of Illinois at Chicago, Center for MR Research, Chicago, IL, USA
          University of Illinois at Chicago, Center for MR Research, Chicago, IL, USA
          University of Illinois at Chicago, Center for MR Research, Chicago, IL, USA
          University of Illinois at Chicago, Center for MR Research, Chicago, IL, USA
          Author notes
          Correspondence to: K. Thulborn, University of Illinois at Chicago, Center for MR Research, 1801 West Taylor St., MC 707, Suite 1307, Chicago, IL 60612, USA. kthulbor@ 123456uic.edu
          Article
          PMC4674376 PMC4674376 4674376 nihpa688127
          10.1002/nbm.3312
          4674376
          26058461
          f3b9cab9-efb6-4592-986d-be9e98cd009b
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