Publication | Closed Access
Detection of metabolic heterogeneity of human intracranial tumors in vivo by <sup>1</sup>h nmr spectroscopic imaging
195
Citations
33
References
1990
Year
Metabolic HeterogeneityEngineeringOncologic ImagingMagnetic ResonanceLactate Resonance LinesGliomaMagnetic Resonance ImagingNeuro-oncologyImaging AgentsNeurologySpatial ResolutionNuclear MedicineMolecular ImagingRadiologyNeuroimagingCerebral Blood FlowBrain ImagingDiagnostic NeuroradiologyHuman Intracranial TumorsMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyBiomedical ImagingCholine CompoundsNeuroscienceMedicine
Patients with intracranial tumors (gliomas) were examined by means of localized water-suppressed 1H NMR single volume spectroscopy and spectroscopic imaging. The 1H NMR spectra of the tumors exhibit signal intensities of the N-acetyl aspartate, choline compounds, and creatine plus phosphocreatine resonance lines that are different from the corresponding intensities observed on normal brain tissue. Also, for 6 out of the 10 patients examined so far, lactate resonance lines were detected in the tumor spectra. For one patient, abnormal 1H NMR spectra were obtained of a hemisphere which appeared normal with 1H NMR imaging. Metabolic heterogeneity of the tumorous regions could be demonstrated with 1H NMR spectroscopic imaging, using a spatial resolution in the order of 1 cm. These results suggest a spectrum of metabolic observations that may ultimately provide an important means for characterizing brain tumors.
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