Quantitative 17O MRSI of myocardial oxygen metabolic rate, blood flow, and oxygen extraction fraction under normal and high workload conditions

Author:

Zhu Xiao‐Hong1,Chen Wei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Magnetic Resonance Research, Radiology Department University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeThe heart is a highly aerobic organ consuming most of the oxygen the body in supporting heart function. Quantitative imaging of myocardial oxygen metabolism and perfusion is essential for studying cardiac physiopathology in vivo. Here, we report a new imaging method that can simultaneously assess myocardial oxygen metabolism and blood flow in the rat heart.MethodsThis novel method is based on the 17O‐MRSI combined with brief inhalation of 17O‐isotope labeled oxygen gas for quantitative imaging of myocardial metabolic rate of oxygen consumption (MVO2), myocardial blood flow (MBF), and oxygen extraction fraction (OEF). We demonstrate this imaging method under basal and high workload conditions in rat hearts at 9.4 T.ResultsWe show that this 17O MRSI–based approach can directly measure and image MVO2 (1.35–4.06 μmol/g/min), MBF (0.49–1.38 mL/g/min), and OEF (0.33–0.44) in the heart of anesthetized rat under basal and high workload (21.6 × 103–56.7 × 103 mmHg • bpm) conditions. Under high workload condition, MVO2 and MBF values in healthy rats approximately doubled, whereas OEF remained unchanged, indicating a strong coupling between myocardial oxygen metabolic demand and supply through blood perfusion.ConclusionThe 17O‐MRSI method has been used to simultaneously image the myocardial metabolic rate of oxygen consumption, blood flow, and oxygen extraction fraction in small animal hearts, which are sensitive to the physiological changes induced by high workload. This approach could provide comprehensive measures that are critical for studying myocardial function in normal and diseased states and has a potential for translation.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

W. M. Keck Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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