Brasch R C, Wesbey G E, Gooding C A, Koerper M A
Radiology. 1984 Mar;150(3):767-71. doi: 10.1148/radiology.150.3.6695078.
Tissue deposits of hemosiderin, a paramagnetic iron-protein complex, resulted in marked abnormalities of magnetic resonance (MR) spin-echo signal intensity within the viscera of three children with transfusional hemosiderosis and thalassemia major. In all patients the liver and bone marrow demonstrated abnormally low spin-echo intensities and the kidneys and muscles had abnormally high intensities. These observations correlate with in vitro MR observations of ferric (Fe+3) solutions, in which concentrations of ferric salts greater than 20 mmol yielded a low MR intensity signal and ferric concentrations less than 15 mmol yielded higher intensities than did water alone. MR imaging is sensitive to the tissue deposition of hemosiderin, and MR intensity appears to provide a rough measure of the amount of iron deposited.