PMID: 8605637Feb 1, 1996Paper

Quantification of cardiac and tissue iron by nuclear magnetic resonance relaxometry in a novel murine thalassemia-cardiac iron overload model

The Canadian Journal of Cardiology
P LiuN Olivieri

Abstract

To determine whether nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation parameters can be used to quantify iron in tissues, the relationship between NMR spectrometric T2 relaxation measurements and tissue iron concentration were verified in a novel murine cardiac iron overload model. Congenital heterozygous thalassemic mice and controls were injected with intraperitoneal iron or saline and were sacrificed at three weeks. Samples of liver, heart and peripheral muscle were subjected to NMR relaxation measurements and continuous distribution analysis. Tissue ferritin levels were determined with immunoadsorbance techniques, and elemental iron was assayed by flame atomic absorption. Tissues were analyzed pathologically with hematoxylin and eosin and Prussian blue staining to confirm the localization of iron. This murine iron loading model was uniquely successful in loading iron into the major organs, especially the heart, and produced significant reductions in T1 and T2 NMR relaxation values. There was a good correlation between soluble ferritin and total iron levels (r=0.92), indicating that there is a constant and significant fraction of total iron present in ferritin irrespective of absolute iron concentrations. Regression analysis betw...Continue Reading

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