Evren Özarslan

National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA

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Publications (4)9.53 Total impact

  • Article: Accurate noninvasive measurement of cell size and compartment shape anisotropy in yeast cells using double-pulsed field gradient MR.
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    ABSTRACT: The accurate characterization of pore morphology is of great interest in a wide range of scientific disciplines. Conventional single-pulsed field gradient (s-PFG) diffusion MR can yield compartmental size and shape only when compartments are coherently ordered using q-space approaches that necessitate strong gradients. However, double-PFG (d-PFG) methodology can provide novel microstructural information even when specimens are characterized by polydispersity in size and shape, and even when anisotropic compartments are randomly oriented. In this study, for the first time, we show that angular d-PFG experiments can be used to accurately measure cellular size and shape anisotropy of fixed yeast cells employing relatively weak gradients. The cell size, as measured by light microscopy, was found to be 5.32 ± 0.83 µm, whereas the results from noninvasive angular d-PFG experiments yielded a cell size of 5.46 ± 0.45 µm. Moreover, the low compartment shape anisotropy of the cells could be inferred from experiments conducted at long mixing times. Finally, similar experiments were conducted in a phantom comprising anisotropic compartments that were randomly oriented, showing that angular d-PFG MR provides novel information on compartment eccentricity that could not be accessed using conventional methods. Angular d-PFG methodology seems to be promising for the accurate estimation of compartment size and compartment shape anisotropy in heterogeneous systems in general, and biological cells and tissues in particular.
    NMR in Biomedicine 07/2011; 25(2):236-46. · 3.21 Impact Factor
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    Article: Nuclear magnetic resonance characterization of general compartment size distributions
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    ABSTRACT: The influence of molecular diffusion on the nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) signal can be exploited to estimate compartment size distributions in heterogeneous specimens. Theoretical relationships between the NMR signal intensity at long diffusion times and the moments of a general distribution of isolated pores with characteristic shapes (planar, cylindrical or spherical) are established. A numerical method based on expressing a general diffusion-attenuated NMR signal profile in a series of complete orthogonal basis functions is introduced and subsequently used to estimate the moments of the compartment size distribution. The results on simulated and real data obtained from controlled water-filled microcapillaries demonstrate the power of the approach to create contrast based not only on the mean of the compartment size but also on its variance. The technique can be used to address a variety of problems such as characterizing distributions of droplet sizes in emulsions and of apparent axon diameters in nerve fascicles.
    New Journal of Physics 01/2011; 13(1):015010. · 4.18 Impact Factor
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    Article: Pore diameter mapping using double pulsed-field gradient MRI and its validation using a novel glass capillary array phantom.
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    ABSTRACT: Double pulsed-field gradient (d-PFG) MRI can provide quantitative maps of microstructural quantities and features within porous media and tissues. We propose and describe a novel MRI phantom, consisting of wafers of highly ordered glass capillary arrays (GCA), and its use to validate and calibrate a d-PFG MRI method to measure and map the local pore diameter. Specifically, we employ d-PFG Spin-Echo Filtered MRI in conjunction with a recently introduced theoretical framework, to estimate a mean pore diameter in each voxel within the imaging volume. This simulation scheme accounts for all diffusion and imaging gradients within the diffusion weighted MRI (DWI) sequence, and admits the violation of the short gradient pulse approximation. These diameter maps agree well with pore sizes measured using both optical microscopy and single PFG diffusion diffraction NMR spectroscopy using the same phantom. Pixel-by-pixel analysis shows that the local pore diameter can be mapped precisely and accurately within a specimen using d-PFG MRI.
    Journal of Magnetic Resonance 10/2010; 208(1):128-35. · 2.14 Impact Factor
  • Article: Parsimonious Model Selection for Tissue Segmentation and Classification Applications: A Study Using Simulated and Experimental DTI Data.
    IEEE Trans. Med. Imaging. 01/2007; 26:1576-1584.