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1.
J Magn Reson Imaging ; 55(2): 435-442, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34322948

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Glutathione (GSH) is an important brain antioxidant and a number of studies have reported its measurement by edited and nonedited localized 1 H spectroscopy techniques within a range of applications in healthy volunteers and disease states. Good test-retest reproducibility is key when assessing the efficacy of treatments aimed at modulating GSH levels within the central nervous system or when noninvasively assessing changes in GSH content over time. PURPOSE: To evaluate the intraday (in vitro and in vivo) and 1-month apart (in vivo) test-retest reproducibility of GSH measurements from GSH-edited MEGA-PRESS acquisitions at 3 T in a phantom and in the brain of a cohort of middle-aged and older healthy volunteers. STUDY TYPE: Prospective. SUBJECTS/PHANTOMS: A phantom containing physiological concentrations of GSH and metabolites with overlapping spectral signatures and 10 healthy volunteers (4 F, 6 M, 55 ± 14 years old). FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE: GSH-edited spectra were acquired at 3 T using the MEGA-PRESS sequence. ASSESSMENT: The phantom was scanned twice and the healthy subjects were scanned three times (on two separate days, 1 month apart). GSH was quantified from each acquisition, with the in vivo voxels placed at the primary motor cortex (PMC) and the occipital cortex (OCC). STATISTICAL TESTS: Mean coefficients of variation (CV) were used to assess short-term (in vitro and in vivo) and longer-term (in vivo) test-retest reproducibility. RESULTS: In vitro, the CV was 2.3%. In vivo, the mean intraday CV was 3.3% in the PMC and 2.4% in the OCC, while the CVs at 1 month apart were 4.6% in the PMC and 7.8% in the OCC. DATA CONCLUSION: GSH-edited MEGA-PRESS spectroscopy allows measurement of GSH with excellent precision. EVIDENCE LEVEL: 1 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 2.


Subject(s)
Motor Cortex , Adult , Aged , Brain , Glutathione , Humans , Middle Aged , Occipital Lobe/diagnostic imaging , Prospective Studies , Reproducibility of Results
2.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ; 89(3): 248-255, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29089397

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess clinical, electrophysiological and whole-body muscle MRI measurements of progression in patients with motor neuron disease (MND), as tools for future clinical trials, and to probe pathophysiological mechanisms in vivo. METHODS: A prospective, longitudinal, observational, clinicoelectrophysiological and radiological cohort study was performed. Twenty-nine patients with MND and 22 age-matched and gender-matched healthy controls were assessed with clinical measures, electrophysiological motor unit number index (MUNIX) and T2-weighted whole-body muscle MRI, at first clinical presentation and 4 months later. Between-group differences and associations were assessed using age-adjusted and gender-adjusted multivariable regression models. Within-subject longitudinal changes were assessed using paired t-tests. Patterns of disease spread were modelled using mixed-effects multivariable regression, assessing associations between muscle relative T2 signal and anatomical adjacency to site of clinical onset. RESULTS: Patients with MND had 30% higher relative T2 muscle signal than controls at baseline (all regions mean, 95% CI 15% to 45%, p<0.001). Higher T2 signal was associated with greater overall disability (coefficient -0.009, 95% CI -0.017 to -0.001, p=0.023) and with clinical weakness and lower MUNIX in multiple individual muscles. Relative T2 signal in bilateral tibialis anterior increased over 4 months in patients with MND (right: 10.2%, 95% CI 2.0% to 18.4%, p=0.017; left: 14.1%, 95% CI 3.4% to 24.9%, p=0.013). Anatomically, contiguous disease spread on MRI was not apparent in this model. CONCLUSIONS: Whole-body muscle MRI offers a new approach to objective assessment of denervation over short timescales in MND and enables investigation of patterns of disease spread in vivo. Muscles inaccessible to conventional clinical and electrophysiological assessment may be investigated using this methodology.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/diagnostic imaging , Muscle, Skeletal/diagnostic imaging , Muscular Atrophy, Spinal/diagnostic imaging , Adult , Aged , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/physiopathology , Case-Control Studies , Cohort Studies , Electromyography , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Motor Neuron Disease/diagnostic imaging , Motor Neuron Disease/physiopathology , Muscle, Skeletal/innervation , Muscle, Skeletal/physiopathology , Muscular Atrophy, Spinal/physiopathology , Prospective Studies , Whole Body Imaging
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