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Callie had settled in and looked at me expectantly. I gave her a hot dog and yelled, “Good girl!” I nodded to Andrew to indicate she was ready.
The sca
Out of the corner of my eye, I could see Andrew hit the first button. He was holding up one finger—the sign for hot dogs.
In my head, I counted two Mississippis and put up the hot dog sign. Callie’s eyes dilated. I tried to count another six Mississippis before giving her the treat. It was just like practicing at home.
We kept at it. Not every repetition was a success, though. One time, I bumped the patient table as I reached in to give Callie her food. The slight jarring spooked her, and she backed out. Amazingly, she retreated only partway and came back when I held up the food.
After what seemed like an eternity, the sca
Callie was waiting for me at the end of the patient table. I gave her a big hug and a handful of hot dog before escaping to the control room, where Robert was scrolling through a series of images on his screen. Most had snow. Occasionally something doglike would appear at the bottom of the screen, only to disappear a few images later.
Nothing.
“She wasn’t in the field of view,” Robert said.
My heart sank. Callie had performed so well, but her position during the localizer had been different. Without knowing it, we had programmed the sca
We had come too far to give up, and Callie showed me that she could do this.
“Let’s switch to a dorsal orientation,” I said.
Staring at Callie’s localizer image, I realized what should have been obvious all along. The dog brain is longer front to back than it is from top to bottom. To better match the flattened shape of the brain, it made sense to take slices from top to bottom, which is called the dorsal orientation. Unless we took very thick slices or a lot of them, the FOV is a rectangular brick that is larger in the plane of the slices. By rotating the FOV to better match the flattened shape of Callie’s head, we would be much more likely to capture her brain regardless of where she put her head down.
Using the cursor, Robert rotated the FOV ninety degrees. It was now aligned parallel to Callie’s brain.
Between the scan and the fiddling at the console, we had burned up another thirty minutes. I broke my internal vow to switch to McKenzie. “Let’s try this one more time. Then we’ll give McKenzie a shot.” Callie was lying on her side next to me. She was tired. I reached down to stroke her. Her tail thwacked the floor, indicating that she still had some juice left.
By now the team had settled into a routine. Rebeccah secured the earmuffs and Andrew took up his position at the rear of the sca
Peas and hot dogs.
This time we blazed through the repetitions. After about ten of each type, I turned to Andrew.
“She’s doing really well,” I said. “Let’s see if the new orientation worked.” He nodded and gave the “cut” signal to Robert. Callie and I both ran to the control room. Everyone was already staring at the console.
Brains. We had brains.
As Robert scrolled through the sequence of images, you could plainly see cross sections through Callie’s brain. We had captured sixty scans, and more than half of them contained an image of a brain.
McKenzie wearing her wrapped-up earmuffs.
(Bryan Meltz)
I was elated. We had surpassed my hope of getting ten good images.
Everyone cheered and high-fived.
Lisa bent down to embrace Callie. “You did it!”
Callie licked her face.
Sinyeob just shook his head in disbelief, while Andrew summed it up: “Wow.”
While everyone crowded around the computer, I sank into a chair, utterly exhausted. I hadn’t realized how intense the last several hours had been. But now the adrenaline that had kept me going drained away, and I crashed. Same for Callie. She had already made her way to Melissa’s pup tent for some quiet time and was sacked out.
But we weren’t done. Now it was McKenzie’s turn.
Callie had forged the way. Based on what we had learned about the noise and the earmuffs, we wouldn’t have to waste any time with McKenzie.
Rebeccah worked her magic with the earmuffs. While Callie wore the small size, McKenzie had to wear mediums. Fully wrapped, McKenzie looked like she was wearing a turban.
Because every dog is a different size and shape, the sca
McKenzie reacted the same way Callie had. As soon as the buzzing started, she scooted out of the magnet. We did this three, four times, and despite the earmuffs, McKenzie was not having any part of it.
“What do you think we should do?” I asked Mark.
“The problem seems to be the sudden onset,” he said. “The dogs are comfortable in the magnet when it’s quiet, but the sca
I turned to Sinyeob: “Can we start the scan before the dog is in there, and then get her to go in while it’s ru
He shook his head. “No, the sca
“Maybe we could mask the transition,” Mark suggested. “I’ll make some noise before the scan starts to distract McKenzie.”
Now on the fifth try, Melissa once again coaxed McKenzie into the MRI. Mark started whooping and hollering at her. Then the shimming began. Maybe it was Mark’s carrying on, or maybe she had finally gotten used to it, but McKenzie stayed put. At least until the klaxon of the localizer began.
She’d been so close.
“Did it complete the shim?”
“Yes,” Sinyeob said, “but she moved before the localizer.” It was almost five o’clock, and we were just about out of time.
“Let’s skip the localizer and go right to the functionals,” I said. “The chin rest should put her head in the same location as Callie’s. We’ll just use the same orientation and field of view that we used on Callie.”
Andrew took up his position at the rear of the sca
I fully expected to see McKenzie’s butt start backing out of the magnet. But she didn’t. Mark stopped hollering. Images started appearing on the sca
McKenzie was staying in the sca