Lactate levels are measurable by MRS and are related to neural activity. Therefore, it is of interest to accurately measure lactate levels in the basal ganglia networks. If sufficiently stable, lactate measurements may be used to investigate alterations in dopaminergic signalling in the striatum, facilitating the detection and diagnosis of metabolic deficits. The aim of this study is to provide a J-difference editing MRS technique for the selective editing of lactate only, thus allowing the detection of lactate without contamination of overlapping macromolecules. As a validation procedure, macromolecule nulling was combined with J-difference editing, and this was compared with J-difference editing with a new highly selective editing pulse. The use of a high-field (7T) MR scanner enables the application of editing pulses with very narrow bandwidth, which are selective for lactate. We show that, despite the sensitivity to B0 offsets, the use of a highly selective editing pulse is more efficient for the detection of lactate than the combination of a broad-band editing pulse with macromolecule nulling. Although the signal-to-noise ratio of uncontaminated lactate detection in healthy subjects is relatively low, this article describes the test-retest performance of lactate detection in the striatum when using highly selective J-difference editing MRS at 7 T. The coefficient of variation, σw and intraclass correlation coefficients for within- and between-subject differences of lactate were determined. Lactate levels in the left and right striatum were determined twice in 10 healthy volunteers. Despite the fact that the test-retest performance of lactate detection is moderate with a coefficient of variation of about 20% for lactate, these values can be used for the design of new studies comparing, for example, patient populations with healthy controls.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/nbm.3278DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

j-difference editing
20
lactate
13
detection lactate
12
lactate levels
12
selective editing
12
highly selective
12
editing pulse
12
lactate detection
12
editing
10
editing lactate
8

Similar Publications

The need to quantify brain glutathione (GSH) accurately by J-difference spectroscopy has stimulated assessment of the TE effects on GSH edited signals at the popular field strength 3 T. We performed multiple-TE J-difference MRS at two sites to evaluate the GSH T relaxation and TE dependence of the GSH signal resolution. Two 10-ms spectrally selective Gaussian editing RF pulses were implemented in 3 T MEGA-PRESS sequences at two sites having different vendors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: The J-difference edited γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) signal is contaminated by other co-edited signals-the largest of which originates from co-edited macromolecules (MMs)-and is consequently often reported as "GABA+." MM signals are broader and less well-characterized than the metabolites, and are commonly approximated using a Gaussian model parameterization. Experimentally measured MM signals are a consensus-recommended alternative to parameterized modeling; however, they are relatively under-studied in the context of edited MRS.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

J-difference-edited MRS is widely used to study GABA in the human brain. Editing for low-concentration target molecules (such as GABA) typically exhibits lower signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) than conventional non-edited MRS, varying with acquisition region, volume and duration. Moreover, spectral lineshape may be influenced by age-, pathology-, or brain-region-specific effects of metabolite T, or by task-related blood-oxygen level dependent (BOLD) changes in functional MRS contexts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Glutamate measurements using edited MRS.

Magn Reson Med

April 2024

Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

Purpose: To demonstrate J-difference coediting of glutamate using Hadamard encoding and reconstruction of Mescher-Garwood-edited spectroscopy (HERMES).

Methods: Density-matrix simulations of HERMES (TE 80 ms) and 1D J-resolved (TE 31-229 ms) of glutamate (Glu), glutamine (Gln), γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), and glutathione (GSH) were performed. HERMES comprised four sub-experiments with editing pulses applied as follows: (A) 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * The researchers tested different flip angles and bandwidths of editing pulses, finding that larger angles (over 180°) maximize lactate signals while minimizing threonine interference during magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 3T.
  • * Results from both simulations and real patient data showed a significant increase in lactate signal yield with these optimized pulse settings, proving effective in brain tumor assessments where elevated lactate levels were present.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!