Title :
Cell Number Quantification of USPIO-labeled Stem Cells by MRI: An In Vitro Study
Author :
Cheung, Jerry S. ; Chow, April M. ; Hui, Edward S. ; Yang, Jian ; Tse, Hung-Fat ; Wu, Ed.X.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Hong Kong Univ.
fDate :
Aug. 30 2006-Sept. 3 2006
Abstract :
MRI plays an expanding role in stem cell therapies. The non-invasive nature and high spatial resolution of MR imaging make MR imaging a powerful tool to investigate biologic processes at the molecular and cellular level in vivo longitudinally. Quantitative detection of stem cells after transplantation may allow assessment of stem cell localization and migration, and monitoring of the therapeutic effectiveness of stem cell therapy. In this study, we present a technique for MR quantification of magnetically labeled mouse embryonic stem cells distributed or injected in agarose gel phantoms. Apparent transverse relaxation rate enhancements (DeltaR2*) were measured by gradient echo sequences. The linear relationship between DeltaR2* and the concentration of USPIO-labeled mouse embryonic stem cells was observed and used for quantifying cell density and cell number after injection or transplantation. The MRI acquisition and analysis protocol were validated by good agreement between actual cell numbers and MRI-estimated cell numbers over a wide range of cell numbers. This MR technique for cell number and cell density quantification is applicable to future in vivo studies
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; biomedical measurement; cellular biophysics; nanoparticles; patient treatment; phantoms; superparamagnetism; FeO; MRI; agarose gel phantoms; apparent transverse relaxation rate measurement; biologic processes; cell density; cell migration; cell number quantification; gradient echo sequences; mouse embryonic stem cells; stem cell localization; stem cell therapies; ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticle-labeled stem cells; Embryo; High-resolution imaging; In vitro; In vivo; Magnetic resonance imaging; Medical treatment; Mice; Monitoring; Spatial resolution; Stem cells;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2006. EMBS '06. 28th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
New York, NY
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0032-5
Electronic_ISBN :
1557-170X
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2006.259696