Double pulsed field gradient (double-PFG) MR imaging (MRI) as a means to measure the size of plant cells.

Özarslan E, Komlosh ME, Lizak MJ, Horkay F, Basser PJ. Double pulsed field gradient (double-PFG) MR imaging (MRI) as a means to measure the size of plant cells. Magn Reson Chem. 2011;49 Suppl 1:79–84.

Abstract

Measurement of diffusion in porous materials and biological tissues with the pulsed field gradient (PFG) MR techniques has proven useful in characterizing the microstructure of such specimens noninvasively. A natural extension of the traditional PFG technique comprises multiple pairs of diffusion gradients. This approach has been shown to provide the ability to characterize anisotropy at different length scales without the need to employ very strong gradients. In this work, the double-PFG imaging technique was used on a specimen involving a series of glass capillary arrays with different diameters. The experiments on the phantom demonstrated the ability to create a quantitative and accurate map of pore sizes. The same technique was subsequently employed to image a celery stalk. A diffusion tensor image (DTI) of the same specimen was instrumental in accurately delineating the regions of vascular tissue and determining the local orientation of cells. This orientation information was incorporated into a theoretical double-PFG framework and the technique was employed to estimate the cell size in the vascular bundles of the celery stalk. The findings suggest that the double-PFG MRI framework could provide important new information regarding the microstructure of many plants and other food products.
Last updated on 02/26/2023