Magnetic resonance imaging of tissue and vascular layers in the cat retina
Shen, Qiang ; Cheng, Haiying ; Pardue, Machelle T. ; Chang, Thomas F. ; Nair, Govind ; Vo, Van Toi ; Shonat, Ross D. ; Duong, Timothy Q.
Citations
Student Authors
Faculty Advisor
Academic Program
UMass Chan Affiliations
Document Type
Publication Date
Subject Area
Embargo Expiration Date
Link to Full Text
Abstract
PURPOSE: To report the visual resolution of multiple cell and vascular "layers" in the cat retina using MRI.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: T2- and diffusion-weighted MRI at 4.7 Tesla was performed. Layer-specific thickness, T2, spin density, apparent diffusion coefficient perpendicular (ADC(perpendicular)) and parallel (ADC(parallel)) to the retinal surface were tabulated. T1-weighted MRI was acquired before and after intravenous administration of Gd-DTPA and subtraction images were obtained. Histology was performed for validation.
RESULTS: Three distinct "layers" were observed. The inner strip nearest to the vitreous (exhibiting large T2, ADC, spin density with Gd-DTPA enhancement) overlapped the ganglion cell layer, bipolar cell layer, and the embedded retinal vascular layer. The middle strip (exhibiting small T2, ADC, spin density without Gd-DTPA enhancement) overlapped the photoreceptor cell layer and the inner and outer segments. The outer strip (exhibiting large T2, ADC, spin density with Gd-DTPA enhancement) overlapped the tapetum and choroidal vascular layer. T2, spin density, ADC(perpendicular) and ADC(parallel) of different "layers" were tabulated. The inner strip was slightly thicker than the other two strips. The total thickness, including neural and nonneural retina, was 358 +/- 13 microm (N = 6) by MRI and 319 +/- 77 microm (N = 5) by histology.
CONCLUSION: MRI provides a noninvasive tool to study the retina with laminar specificity without depth limitation.
Source
J Magn Reson Imaging. 2006 Apr;23(4):465-72. Link to article on publisher's site
Year of Medical School at Time of Visit
Sponsors
Dates of Travel
DOI
Permanent Link to this Item
PubMed ID
Other Identifiers
Notes
Medical student Thomas F. Chang participated in this study as part of the Senior Scholars research program at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.