Accuracy and stability of measuring GABA, glutamate, and glutamine by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy: a phantom study at 4 Tesla |
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Authors: | Henry Michael E Lauriat Tara L Shanahan Meghan Renshaw Perry F Jensen J Eric |
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Affiliation: | a Caritas St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry, 736 Cambridge St., Boston, MA 02135, USA;b McLean Hospital, Brain Imaging Center, 115 Mill St., Belmont, MA 02478, USA;c University of Utah School of Medicine, The Brain Institute and Department of Psychiatry, 50 North Medical Dr., Salt Lake City, UT 84132, USA |
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Abstract: | Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy has the potential to provide valuable information about alterations in gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glutamate (Glu), and glutamine (Gln) in psychiatric and neurological disorders. In order to use this technique effectively, it is important to establish the accuracy and reproducibility of the methodology. In this study, phantoms with known metabolite concentrations were used to compare the accuracy of 2D J-resolved MRS, single-echo 30 ms PRESS, and GABA-edited MEGA-PRESS for measuring all three aforementioned neurochemicals simultaneously. The phantoms included metabolite concentrations above and below the physiological range and scans were performed at baseline, 1 week, and 1 month time-points. For GABA measurement, MEGA-PRESS proved optimal with a measured-to-target correlation of R(2)=0.999, with J-resolved providing R(2)=0.973 for GABA. All three methods proved effective in measuring Glu with R(2)=0.987 (30 ms PRESS), R(2)=0.996 (J-resolved) and R(2)=0.910 (MEGA-PRESS). J-resolved and MEGA-PRESS yielded good results for Gln measures with respective R(2)=0.855 (J-resolved) and R(2)=0.815 (MEGA-PRESS). The 30 ms PRESS method proved ineffective in measuring GABA and Gln. When measurement stability at in vivo concentration was assessed as a function of varying spectral quality, J-resolved proved the most stable and immune to signal-to-noise and linewidth fluctuation compared to MEGA-PRESS and 30 ms PRESS. |
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Keywords: | Magnetic resonance spectroscopy Phantom Glutamate GABA Glutamine |
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