Liver Metabolite Concentrations Measured with 1H MR Spectroscopy

R Ouwerkerk, RI Pettigrew, AM Gharib - Radiology, 2012 - pubs.rsna.org
R Ouwerkerk, RI Pettigrew, AM Gharib
Radiology, 2012pubs.rsna.org
Purpose To determine the feasibility of measuring choline and glycogen concentrations in
normal human liver in vivo with proton (hydrogen 1 [1H]) magnetic resonance (MR)
spectroscopy. Materials and Methods Signed consent to participate in an institutional review
board–approved and HIPAA-compliant study was obtained from 46 subjects (mean age, 46
years±17 [standard deviation]; 24 women) consecutively recruited during 285 days.
Navigator-gated MR images were used to select 8-mL volumes for point-resolved …
Purpose
To determine the feasibility of measuring choline and glycogen concentrations in normal human liver in vivo with proton (hydrogen 1 [1H]) magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy.
Materials and Methods
Signed consent to participate in an institutional review board–approved and HIPAA-compliant study was obtained from 46 subjects (mean age, 46 years ± 17 [standard deviation]; 24 women) consecutively recruited during 285 days. Navigator-gated MR images were used to select 8-mL volumes for point-resolved spectroscopy (PRESS) with a 35-msec echo time. Line widths were minimized with fast breath-hold B0 field mapping and further manual shimming. Navigator-gated spectra were recorded with and without water suppression to determine metabolite concentrations with water signals as an internal reference. In three subjects, echo time was varied to determine the glycogen and choline T2. Linear regression analysis was used to examine relations between choline, hepatic lipid content, body mass index, glycogen content, and age.
Results
Choline concentrations could be determined in 46 of 48 studies and was found to be 8.6 mmol per kilogram of wet weight ± 3.1 (range, 3.8–17.6; n = 44). Twenty-seven spectra in 25 individuals with narrow line widths and low lipid content were adequate for quantitation of glycogen. The glycogen (glucosyl unit) concentration was 38.1 mmol/kg wet weight ± 14.4. The T2 of combined glycogen peaks in the liver of three subjects was 36 msec ± 8. Choline levels showed a weak but significant correlation with glycogen (r2 = 0.15; P < .05) but not with lipid content.
Conclusion
Navigator-gated and gradient-echo shimmed PRESS 1H MR spectroscopy may allow quantification of liver metabolites that are important for understanding and identifying disorders of glucose and lipid metabolism.
© RSNA, 2012
Supplemental material:
Radiological Society of North America