Search results for "Proton dynamic"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
Anomalous water dynamics in brain: a combined diffusion magnetic resonance imaging and neutron scattering investigation
2019
International audience; Water diffusion is an optimal tool for investigating the architecture of brain tissue on which modern medical diagnostic imaging techniques rely. However, intrinsic tissue heterogeneity causes systematic deviations from pure free-water diffusion behaviour. To date, numerous theoretical and empirical approaches have been proposed to explain the non-Gaussian profile of this process. The aim of this work is to shed light on the physics piloting water diffusion in brain tissue at the micrometre-to-atomic scale. Combined diffusion magnetic resonance imaging and first pioneering neutron scattering experiments on bovine brain tissue have been performed in order to probe dif…
Water Dynamics in Neural Tissue
2013
Water dynamics in post-mortem two-years old bovine cerebral right hemisphere has been investigated through Elastic and Quasi-elastic Neutron Scattering. Experimental parameters such as stability in time of the proton dynamics, data reproducibility and changes in the tissues dynamics upon the conservation protocol, cryogenic towards formalin addition, have been carefully investigated. Results are extremely encouraging and comparisons to magnetic resonance imaging findings are discussed.
Exploring cell biodiversity - Neutron scattering investigation of water diffusion in complex system
2015
Scientists from biophysics, biology and medicine fields are interested in exploring and characterizing topologically cerebral tissue in order to diagnostic different diseases which affect brain in many patients [1-3]. One of the most diffuse diagnostic techniques is dMRI (diffusion magnetic resonance imaging) which extracts information about heterogeneity and asymmetries in brain tissue studying water diffusion dynamics (~80% mass constituent of tissues). The experimental limit of this technique is related to the acquisition time, TA, of the order of milliseconds. Water molecules diffuse within micrometre distance using TA as diffuse time (Eistein equation D~2TA). Cells have micrometric siz…