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Chemical shift imaging of human brain: axial, sagittal, and coronal P-31 metabolite images.
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1990
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EngineeringPet-mriBrain MappingBrain ScienceMagnetic Resonance ImagingChemical ImageMultivoxel Magnetic ResonanceNeurologyNuclear MedicineMolecular ImagingRadiologyMedical ImagingBrain AnalysisChemical Shift ImagingNeuroimagingMetabolomicsBrain ImagingFourier TransformCsi ArraysMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyBiomedical ImagingMass SpectrometryHuman NeuroscienceNeuroscienceMedicine
Multivoxel magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy and novel data analysis techniques were developed to obtain high-quality phosphorus-31 metabolite images from the human brain and to overlay each metabolite distribution directly onto corresponding hydrogen-1 MR images. The P-31 MR spectroscopic data were acquired by means of three-dimensional chemical shift imaging (phase encoding in three spatial dimensions) on a 1.5-T clinical instrument equipped with a specially designed quadrature P-31 birdcage coil constructed in the authors' laboratory. Axial, sagittal, and coronal metabolite images based on the area for any one of five peak regions (phosphodiester; phosphocreatine; gamma, alpha, and beta adenosine triphosphate) were generated from 8 X 8 X 8 or 12 X 12 X 8 CSI arrays with voxel sizes of 27 cm3 and 12 cm3, respectively. The positions of these images were aligned with anatomic features by means of the voxel-shifting capability of the Fourier transform. Direct overlays of these metabolite images on corresponding proton images demonstrated excellent correlation with anatomy, factors indicating the utility of this technique for viewing P-31 metabolite levels in all areas of the brain simultaneously.