Functional FDG-PET: Measurement of Task Related Neural Activity in Humans—A Compartment Model Approach and Comparison to fMRI

Author:

Madsen Saga Steinmann12ORCID,Hvidsten Svend3,Andersen Thomas Lund4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Neuropsychiatric Depression (CNDR), Mental Health Center Glostrup, Capital Region of Denmark, 2600 Glostrup, Denmark

2. Department of Clinical Research, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Southern Denmark, 5000 Odense, Denmark

3. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Odense University Hospital (OUH), 5000 Odense, Denmark

4. Department of Clinical Physiology & Nuclear Medicine, Rigshospitalet, 2300 København Ø, Denmark

Abstract

Neuroimaging holds an essential position in global healthcare, as brain-related disorders are a substantial and growing burden. Non-degenerative disorders such as stress, depression and anxiety share common function related traits of diffuse and fluctuating changes, such as change in brain-based functions of mood, behavior and cognitive abilities, where underlying physiological mechanism remain unresolved. In this study we developed a novel application for studying intra-subject task-activated brain function by the quantitative physiological measurement of the change in glucose metabolism in a single scan setup. Data were acquired on a PET/MR-scanner. We implemented a functional [18F]-FDG PET-scan with double boli-tracer administration and finger-tapping activation, as proof-of-concept, in five healthy participants. The [18F]-FDG data were analyzed using a two-tissue compartment double boli kinetic model with an image-derived input function. For stand-alone visual reference, blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) functional MRI (fMRI) was acquired in the same session and analyzed separately. We were able to measure the cerebral glucose metabolic rate during baseline as well as activation. Results showed increased glucose metabolic rate during activation by 36.3–87.9% mean 62.0%, locally in the peak seed region of M1 in the brain, on an intra-subject level, as well as very good spatial accuracy on group level, and localization compared to the BOLD fMRI result at subject and group level. Our novel method successfully determined the relative increase in the cerebral metabolic rate of glucose on a voxel level with good visual association to fMRI at the subject-level, holding promise for future individual clinical application. This approach will be easily adapted in future clinical perspectives and pharmacological interventions studies.

Funder

University of Southern Denmark

University Hospital Odense

Health Foundation, Denmark

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry

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