Investigation of metabolite correlates of CEST in the human brain at 7 T

Author:

Schmitz‐Abecassis Bárbara12ORCID,Najac Chloé1ORCID,Plugge Jaimy13,van Osch Matthias J. P.12ORCID,Ercan Ece14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. C.J. Gorter MRI Center, Department of Radiology Leiden University Medical Center Leiden The Netherlands

2. Medical Delta Delft The Netherlands

3. Leiden Institute of Physics Leiden University Leiden The Netherlands

4. MR R&D, Clinical Science, Philips Best The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractMetabolite‐weighted chemical exchange saturation transfer MRI can be used to indirectly image metabolites such as creatine and glutamate. This study aims to further explore the contrast of CEST at 2 ppm in the human brain at 7T and investigate the metabolite correlates of CEST at 2 ppm via correlations with magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). Simulations were performed to establish the optimal acquisition parameters, such as total saturation time (tsat) and B1 root mean squared (B1rms) for CEST at 2 ppm in the human brain. Parameters were validated via in vitro phantom studies at 7T using concentrations, pH and temperature comparable to what is found in the human brain. Finally, 10 healthy volunteers were scanned at 7T for comparison with MRS. Our results show that the optimal parameters to acquire CEST at 2 ppm images are: B1rms = 2.14 μT & tsat = 1500 ms, respectively. Comparison with MRS showed no significant correlation between CEST at 2 ppm and total Creatine measured by MRS (R = 0.19; p‐value = 0.273). However, a significant correlation was found between CEST at 2 ppm and Glu (R = 0.39; p‐value = 0.033), indicating the broad Glutamate‐weighted CEST as the main measurable contributor to CEST at 2 ppm. We identified and confirmed optimal CEST at 2 ppm sequence parameters and validated CEST at 2 ppm measurements in a controlled in vitro environment. Our findings suggest that glutamate is a substantial contributor to the CEST at 2 ppm contrast observed in the human brain, whereas the creatine contribution to CEST at 2 ppm in the brain did not show a measurable contribution.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Spectroscopy,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Molecular Medicine

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