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Article Abstract

Objectives: Noninvasive, affordable, and reliable mapping of brain glucose metabolism is of critical interest for clinical research and routine application as metabolic impairment is linked to numerous pathologies, for example, cancer, dementia, and depression. A novel approach to map glucose metabolism noninvasively in the human brain has been presented recently on ultrahigh-field magnetic resonance (MR) scanners (≥7T) using indirect detection of deuterium-labeled glucose and downstream metabolites such as glutamate, glutamine, and lactate. The aim of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility to noninvasively detect deuterium-labeled downstream glucose metabolites indirectly in the human brain via 3-dimensional (3D) proton ( 1 H) MR spectroscopic imaging on a clinical 3T MR scanner without additional hardware.

Materials And Methods: This prospective, institutional review board-approved study was performed in 7 healthy volunteers (mean age, 31 ± 4 years, 5 men/2 women) after obtaining written informed consent. After overnight fasting and oral deuterium-labeled glucose administration, 3D metabolic maps were acquired every ∼4 minutes with ∼0.24 mL isotropic spatial resolution using real-time motion-, shim-, and frequency-corrected echo-less 3D 1 H-MR spectroscopic Imaging on a clinical routine 3T MR system. To test the interscanner reproducibility of the method, subjects were remeasured on a similar 3T MR system. Time courses were analyzed using linear regression and nonparametric statistical tests. Deuterium-labeled glucose and downstream metabolites were detected indirectly via their respective signal decrease in dynamic 1 H MR spectra due to exchange of labeled and unlabeled molecules.

Results: Sixty-five minutes after deuterium-labeled glucose administration, glutamate + glutamine (Glx) signal intensities decreased in gray/white matter (GM/WM) by -1.63 ± 0.3/-1.0 ± 0.3 mM (-13% ± 3%, P = 0.02/-11% ± 3%, P = 0.02), respectively. A moderate to strong negative correlation between Glx and time was observed in GM/WM ( r = -0.64, P < 0.001/ r = -0.54, P < 0.001), with 60% ± 18% ( P = 0.02) steeper slopes in GM versus WM, indicating faster metabolic activity. Other nonlabeled metabolites showed no significant changes. Excellent intrasubject repeatability was observed across scanners for static results at the beginning of the measurement (coefficient of variation 4% ± 4%), whereas differences were observed in individual Glx dynamics, presumably owing to physiological variation of glucose metabolism.

Conclusion: Our approach translates deuterium metabolic imaging to widely available clinical routine MR scanners without specialized hardware, offering a safe, affordable, and versatile (other substances than glucose can be labeled) approach for noninvasive imaging of glucose and neurotransmitter metabolism in the human brain.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10184811PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/RLI.0000000000000953DOI Listing

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