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Glutamate measurements using edited MRS.

Authors :
Saleh MG
Prescot A
Chang L
Cloak C
Cunningham E
Subramaniam P
Renshaw PF
Yurgelun-Todd D
Zöllner HJ
Roberts TPL
Edden RAE
Ernst T
Source :
Magnetic resonance in medicine [Magn Reson Med] 2024 Apr; Vol. 91 (4), pp. 1314-1322. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Dec 03.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Purpose: To demonstrate J-difference coediting of glutamate using Hadamard encoding and reconstruction of Mescher-Garwood-edited spectroscopy (HERMES).<br />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) 1.9/4.56 ppm simultaneously (ON <subscript>GABA</subscript> /ON <subscript>GSH</subscript> ); (B) 1.9 ppm only (ON <subscript>GABA</subscript> /OFF <subscript>GSH</subscript> ); (C) 4.56 ppm only (OFF <subscript>GABA</subscript> /ON <subscript>GSH</subscript> ); and (D) 7.5 ppm (OFF <subscript>GABA</subscript> /OFF <subscript>GSH</subscript> ). Phantom HERMES and 1D J-resolved experiments of Glu were performed. Finally, in vivo HERMES (20-ms editing pulses) and 1D J-resolved (TE 31-229 ms) experiments were performed on 137 participants using 3 T MRI scanners. LCModel was used for quantification.<br />Results: HERMES simulation and phantom experiments show a Glu-edited signal at 2.34 ppm in the Hadamard sum combination A+B+C+D with no overlapping Gln signal. The J-resolved simulations and phantom experiments show substantial TE modulation of the Glu and Gln signals across the TEs, whose average yields a well-resolved Glu signal closely matching the Glu-edited signal from the HERMES sum spectrum. In vivo quantification of Glu show that the two methods are highly correlated (p < 0.001) with a bias of ∼10%, along with similar between-subject coefficients of variation (HERMES/TE-averaged: ∼7.3%/∼6.9%). Other Hadamard combinations produce the expected GABA-edited (A+B-C-D) or GSH-edited (A-B+C-D) signal.<br />Conclusion: HERMES simulation and phantom experiments show the separation of Glu from Gln. In vivo HERMES experiments yield Glu (without Gln), GABA, and GSH in a single MRS scan.<br /> (© 2023 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1522-2594
Volume :
91
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Magnetic resonance in medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38044723
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.29929