Neurogastroenterol Motil
December 2024
Introduction: Gastrointestinal (GI) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) enables simultaneous assessment of gastric peristalsis, emptying, and intestinal filling and transit. However, GI MRI in animals typically requires anesthesia, which complicates physiology and confounds interpretation and translation to humans. This study aimed to establish GI MRI in conscious rats, and for the first time, characterize GI motor functions in awake versus anesthetized conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Gastrointestinal (GI) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can simultaneously capture gastric peristalsis, emptying, and intestinal filling and transit. Performing GI MRI with animals requires anesthesia, which complicates physiology and confounds interpretation and translation from animals to humans. This study aims to enable MRI in conscious rats, and for the first time, characterize GI motor functions in awake versus anesthetized conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol
September 2024
The stomach's ability to store, mix, propel, and empty its content requires highly coordinated motor functions. However, current diagnostic tools cannot simultaneously assess these motor processes. This study aimed to use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to map multifaceted gastric motor functions, including accommodation, tonic and peristaltic contractions, and emptying, through a single noninvasive experiment for both humans and rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To observe the growth and resolution of decompression gas bubbles in the spinal cord of live rats in real time using MRI.
Methods: We constructed an MRI-compatible pressure chamber system to visualize gas bubble dynamics in deep tissues in real time. The system pressurizes and depressurizes rodents inside an MRI scanner and monitors their respiratory rate, heart rate, and body temperature while providing gaseous anesthesia under pressure during the experiments.
Objective: Gastrointestinal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides rich spatiotemporal data about the movement of the food inside the stomach, but does not directly report muscular activity on the stomach wall. Here we describe a novel approach to characterize the motility of the stomach wall that drives the volumetric changes of the ingesta.
Methods: A neural ordinary differential equation was optimized to model a diffeomorphic flow that ascribed the deformation of the stomach wall to a continuous biomechanical process.
Contemporary material characterization techniques that leverage deformation fields and the weak form of the equilibrium equations face challenges in the numerical solution procedure of the inverse characterization problem. As material models and descriptions differ, so too must the approaches for identifying parameters and their corresponding mechanisms. The widely used Ogden material model can be comprised of a chosen number of terms of the same mathematical form, which presents challenges of parsimonious representation, interpretability and stability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Ultrason Ferroelectr Freq Control
January 2021
An inexpensive, accurate focused ultrasound stereotactic targeting method guided by pretreatment magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) images for murine brain models is presented. An uncertainty of each sub-component of the stereotactic system was analyzed. The entire system was calibrated using clot phantoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBecause of the importance of adrenoreceptors in regulating the cardiovascular (CV) system and the role of the CV system in thermoregulation, understanding the response to these two stressors is of interest. The purpose of this study was to assess changes of arterial geometry and function during thermal and β-adrenergic stress induced in mice and quantified by MRI. Male mice were anesthetized and imaged at 7 T.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel displacement-encoding spin-echo-stimulated-echo MRI sequence (APGSTEi) was used to obtain full-volume 3D strain fields in samples of two soft materials, a silicone elastomer and an ovine ligament. The samples were stretched cyclically and imaged synchronously. The multi-slice imaging sequence employed a combination of hard and soft spin-echos with bipolar gradient pulses for spatial encoding and decoding, combined with rapid multi-slice spin echo readouts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough widely used as a preclinical model for studying cardiovascular diseases, there is a scarcity of in vivo hemodynamic measurements of the naïve murine system in multiple arterial and venous locations, from head-to-toe, and across sex and age. The purpose of this study is to quantify cardiovascular hemodynamics in mice at different locations along the vascular tree while evaluating the effects of sex and age. Male and female, adult and aged mice were anesthetized and underwent magnetic resonance imaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: One of the primary biomechanical factors influencing arterial health is their deformation across the cardiac cycle, or cyclic strain, which is often associated with arterial stiffness. Deleterious changes in the cardiovascular system, e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cardiovascular system plays a crucial role in thermoregulation. Deep core veins, due to their large size and role in returning blood to the heart, are an important part of this system. The response of veins to increasing core temperature has not been adequately studied in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The cardiovascular (CV) system plays a vital role in thermoregulation. To date, the response of core vasculature to increasing core temperature has not been adequately studied in vivo. Our objective was to non-invasively quantify the arterial response in murine models due to increases in body temperature, with a focus on core vessels of the torso and investigate whether responses were dependent on sex or age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough widely used as a preclinical model for studying venous diseases, there is a scarcity of in vivo characterizations of the naïve murine venous system. Additionally, previous studies on naïve veins (ex vivo) have not included the influence of surrounding structures and biomechanical forces. Using MRI, we noninvasively quantified the cross-sectional area, cyclic strain, and circularity of the venous system in young and old, male and female C57BL/6 mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report small angle neutron scattering (SANS) experiments on two crude oils. Analysis of the high-Q SANS region has probed the asphaltene aggregates in the nanometer length scale. We find that the radius of gyration decreases with increasing temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe use displacement encoding pulsed field gradient (PFG) nuclear magnetic resonance to measure Fourier components S(q) of flow displacement distributions P(zeta) with mean displacement (zeta) for Newtonian and non-Newtonian flows through rocks and bead packs. Displacement distributions are non-Gaussian; hence, there are finite terms above second order in the cumulant expansion of ln(S(q)). We describe an algorithm for an optimal self-consistent cumulant analysis of data, which can be used to obtain the first three (central) moments of a non-Gaussian P(zeta), with error bars.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe measure the probability distribution P(zeta)--the propagator--of molecular displacements on Stokes flow through a pack of microporous glass beads and a carbonate rock. An optimized sampling of q-space is introduced for the measurement of a P(zeta) and its first moment zeta. Our results delineate and provide an understanding of the experimental regimes where background fields and surface relaxation distort the measured propagators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper explores the correlation between different microstructural characteristics of porous sedimentary rocks and the flow properties of a Newtonian infiltrating fluid. Preliminary results of displacement propagator measurements of brine solution flowing through two types of sedimentary rock cores are reported. The two types of rocks, Bentheimer and Portland, are characterized by different porosities, pore-size distributions and permeabilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a one-scan method for determining fluid flow velocity within a few milliseconds in the presence of a static field gradient, and without the need of multiple scans. A few RF-pulses populate a series of coherence pathways, each of which exhibits a phase shift that is proportional to fluid velocity. These coherence pathways produce spin echoes separated in the time domain, thus eliminating the need for phase cycling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
December 2002
The propagator for molecular displacements P(zeta, t) and its first three cumulants were measured for Stokes flow in monodisperse bead packs with different sphere sizes d and molecular diffusion coefficients D(m). We systematically varied the normalized mean displacement