Robin de Graaf, PhD
Professor of Radiology and Biomedical ImagingCards
Appointments
Contact Info
Radiology & Biomedical Imaging
PO Box 208042, Tompkin's East 2
New Haven, CT 06520-8042
United States
About
Titles
Professor of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging
Appointments
Radiology & Biomedical Imaging
ProfessorPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
- Bioimaging Sciences
- Dean's Workshops
- Deuterium Metabolic Imaging (DMI)
- Magnetic Resonance Research Center
- Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
- Quantitative Neuroscience with Magnetic Resonance
- Radiology & Biomedical Imaging
- Yale Ventures
Education & Training
- PhD
- Utrecht University (1998)
- Ph.D. student
- Utrecht University (1994)
Research
Overview
The main focus of Dr. Robin de Graaf's research is the study of cerebral energy metabolism and its relationship to functional activation in human and animal brains. NMR spectroscopy (proton, (inverse) carbon-13, oxygen-17 and phosphorus-31) is the most important tool in the study of metabolic processes and fluxes, non-invasively in vivo. Besides studying brain energy metabolism, a significant part of the research is reserved for technological and methodological improvements to the technique of NMR spectroscopy. These include methods for better water suppression, spatial localization, spectral editing, quantification, and shimming. Dr. de Graaf's current research focus covers areas that are all related to tackling the challenges and grasping the opportunities of MR at very high magnetic fields. Developing methods to achieve magnetic field uniformity throughout the human and animal brain are central to the technological innovation of his research. The problem of magnetic field inhomogeneity is tackled through dynamic shimming and through the use of novel electrical coil element arrays. 13C NMR methods have been pioneered at the Yale MRRC and part of his research is to extend those methods to achieve 3D coverage, higher sensitivity (through 1H detection), and higher specificity (e.g., GABA turnover detection).
Software Download:
1. Multi-coil shimming of the human brain at 7 T.
2. 3D metabolic flux mapping on rat brain in situ.
3. Development of 1H[13C] NMR methods at 7 T.
4. Compensation of gradient-related magnetic field perturbations.
5. 1H NMR-based metabolomics.
Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Publications Timeline
Research Interests
Henk De Feyter, PhD
Douglas Rothman, PhD
Graeme Mason, PhD
James Duncan, PhD
John Onofrey, PhD
Robert Fulbright, MD
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
Energy Metabolism
Publications
2024
Development of a 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy technique to quantify NADH and NAD+ at 3 T
Mevenkamp J, Bruls Y, Mancilla R, Grevendonk L, Wildberger J, Brouwers K, Hesselink M, Schrauwen P, Hoeks J, Houtkooper R, Buitinga M, de Graaf R, Lindeboom L, Schrauwen-Hinderling V. Development of a 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy technique to quantify NADH and NAD+ at 3 T. Nature Communications 2024, 15: 9159. PMID: 39443469, PMCID: PMC11499639, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-53292-4.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsPhysically active older adultsActive older adultsMetabolic healthHuman skeletal musclePhosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopySedentary individualsOlder adultsStimulate mitochondrial biogenesisHealthSkeletal muscleMitochondrial biogenesisNAD+Physiological decreaseNADH contentNADHQuantify NADHClinical 3Magnetic resonance spectroscopy techniquesMR sequencesAdultsMeasurement reproducibilityA Flow-based Truncated Denoising Diffusion Model for super-resolution Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Imaging
Dong S, Cai Z, Hangel G, Bogner W, Widhalm G, Huang Y, Liang Q, You C, Kumaragamage C, Fulbright R, Mahajan A, Karbasi A, Onofrey J, de Graaf R, Duncan J. A Flow-based Truncated Denoising Diffusion Model for super-resolution Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Imaging. Medical Image Analysis 2024, 99: 103358. PMID: 39353335, DOI: 10.1016/j.media.2024.103358.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsDenoising diffusion modelsDeep learning-based super-resolution methodsLearning-based super-resolution methodsMulti-scale super-resolutionGenerative modelSuper-resolution methodsDeep learning modelsHigh-resolution magnetic resonance spectroscopic imagingHigh-quality imagesPost-processing approachSuper-resolutionFlow-based networksLearning modelsLow resolutionTruncation stepLow-resolution dataSharpness adjustmentNetworkSensitivity restrictionsUncertainty estimationDiffusion modelImagesCapabilitySampling processSpectroscopic imagingHigh-quality lipid suppression and B0 shimming for human brain 1H MRSI
Kumaragamage C, McIntyre S, Nixon T, De Feyter H, de Graaf R. High-quality lipid suppression and B0 shimming for human brain 1H MRSI. NeuroImage 2024, 300: 120845. PMID: 39276817, DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2024.120845.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsOuter volume suppressionInner volume selectionSlice coverageField shimmingLipid suppressionMRSI acquisitionMagnetic field shimmingMagnetic resonance spectroscopic imagingSpherical harmonic fieldsBrain non-invasivelyAxial coverageMulti-coilRadio frequencyVolume suppressionB0 shimmingBrain coverageGradient coilsHarmonic fieldVolume selectionGradient insertShimming performancePhantom experimentsField variationsSpectroscopic imagingProton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imagingIndirect 1H–[13C] MRS of the human brain at 7 T using a 13C‐birdcage coil and eight transmit–receive 1H‐dipole antennas with a 32‐channel 1H‐receive array
Jacobs S, Prompers J, van der Kemp W, van der Velden T, Gosselink M, Meliadò E, Hoogduin H, Mason G, de Graaf R, Miller C, Bredael G, van der Kolk A, Alborahal C, Klomp D, Wiegers E. Indirect 1H–[13C] MRS of the human brain at 7 T using a 13C‐birdcage coil and eight transmit–receive 1H‐dipole antennas with a 32‐channel 1H‐receive array. NMR In Biomedicine 2024, 37: e5195. PMID: 38845018, DOI: 10.1002/nbm.5195.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsStimulated echo acquisition modeSignal-to-noise ratioSlice-selective excitationAdiabatic selective refocusingUltra-high fieldIncreased spectral dispersionEcho acquisition modeSpectral dispersionVoxel positionSemi-localPhantomAcquisition modeElectromagnetic simulationsHuman brainSAR limitsExcitationBi-frontalSLASERHealthy volunteersSpectraLipid removal in deuterium metabolic imaging (DMI) using spatial prior knowledge
de Graaf R, Liu Y, Corbin Z, De Feyter H. Lipid removal in deuterium metabolic imaging (DMI) using spatial prior knowledge. Magnetic Resonance 2024, 5: 21-31. DOI: 10.5194/mr-5-21-2024.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetric
2023
In vivo demonstration of arbitrary ROI shaping and B0 shimming with MC-ECLIPSE for applications in human brain proton MRSI
Kumaragamage C, McIntyre S, Nixon T, De Feyter H, de Graaf R. In vivo demonstration of arbitrary ROI shaping and B0 shimming with MC-ECLIPSE for applications in human brain proton MRSI. Proceedings Of The International Society For Magnetic Resonance In Medicine ... Scientific Meeting And Exhibition. 2023 DOI: 10.58530/2023/1238.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchParallel Proton and Deuterium Metabolic Imaging
Liu Y, Kumaragamage C, Nixon T, McIntyre S, De Feyter H, de Graaf R. Parallel Proton and Deuterium Metabolic Imaging. Proceedings Of The International Society For Magnetic Resonance In Medicine ... Scientific Meeting And Exhibition. 2023 DOI: 10.58530/2023/3870.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchExpanding interleaved MRI-DMI to 3D SWI (Susceptibility Weighted Imaging) : A truncated acquisition approach
Liu Y, Corbin Z, Fulbright R, Nixon T, McIntyre S, De Feyter H, de Graaf R. Expanding interleaved MRI-DMI to 3D SWI (Susceptibility Weighted Imaging) : A truncated acquisition approach. Proceedings Of The International Society For Magnetic Resonance In Medicine ... Scientific Meeting And Exhibition. 2023 DOI: 10.58530/2023/0013.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsRobust and Automated Processing of Deuterium Metabolic Imaging (DMI) using Spatial Prior Knowledge
de Graaf R, Liu Y, Corbin Z, De Feyter H. Robust and Automated Processing of Deuterium Metabolic Imaging (DMI) using Spatial Prior Knowledge. Proceedings Of The International Society For Magnetic Resonance In Medicine ... Scientific Meeting And Exhibition. 2023 DOI: 10.58530/2023/4107.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchReproducibility of 13C labeling of glutamate and glutamine in human brain using selPOCE MRS at 7T upon [U-13C]-labeled glucose infusion
Ahmadian N, Jacobs S, Gosselink M, van der Kemp W, Hoogduin H, Coppoli A, Mason G, de Graaf R, Norouzizadeh H, Mahon C, van Marle S, van Eijsden P, Cerneus D, Miller C, De Lepeleire I, Basile A, Klomp D, Prompers J, Wiegers E. Reproducibility of 13C labeling of glutamate and glutamine in human brain using selPOCE MRS at 7T upon [U-13C]-labeled glucose infusion. Proceedings Of The International Society For Magnetic Resonance In Medicine ... Scientific Meeting And Exhibition. 2023 DOI: 10.58530/2023/5332.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
Clinical Trials
Current Trials
Impact of Hypoglycemia on Brain Ketone and Neurotransmitter Metabolism in Type 1 DM
HIC ID1208010648RoleSub InvestigatorPrimary Completion Date09/29/2022Recruiting ParticipantsGenderBothAge18+ years
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
activity NMR at High Magnetic Fields
LectureInvited Lecturer, NMR at High Magnetic FieldsDetails01/01/2008 - PresentUtrecht, UT, NetherlandsSponsored by Utrecht UniversityAbstract/SynopsisInvited Lecturer, NMR at High Magnetic Fields
activity In vivo NMR spectroscopy at high magnetic fields
LectureHigh-field Magnetic Resonance in MedicineDetails01/01/2005 - PresentUtrecht, UT, NetherlandsSponsored by Utrecht UniversityAbstract/SynopsisInvited Lecturer, In vivo NMR spectroscopy at high magnetic fields, Symposium ‘High-field Magnetic Resonance in Medicine’
activity Energetic costs associated with glutamatergic and GABAergic neurotransmission
LectureInvited Lecturer, Energetic costs associated with glutamatergic and GABAergic neurotransmission, BrainDetails01/01/2005 - PresentAmsterdam, North Holland, NetherlandsAbstract/SynopsisInvited Lecturer, Energetic costs associated with glutamatergic and GABAergic neurotransmission, Brain
activity Theory of adiabatic RF pulses
LectureInvited Lecturer, Theory of adiabatic RF pulsesDetails01/01/1998 - PresentLondon, ON, CanadaSponsored by University of LondonAbstract/SynopsisInvited Lecturer, Theory of adiabatic RF pulses
News & Links
Media
- MR technology developments are focused on magnetic field shaping to allow improved magnetic field homogeneity ('shimming'), spatial localization and novel MRI methods. Educational efforts are pursued via publications, lectures, books and on-line videos. Cerebral metabolism is studied with a range of MR spectroscopy methods, including 13C and 31P MRS as well as the novel deuterium metabolic imaging (DMI) method.
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Get In Touch
Contacts
Radiology & Biomedical Imaging
PO Box 208042, Tompkin's East 2
New Haven, CT 06520-8042
United States