Measurement of the ratio of cerebral oxygen consumption to glucose utilization by positron emission tomography: Its consistency with the values determined by the Kety-Schmidt method in normal volunteers

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Abstract

The regional relationship between cerebral oxygen consumption (CMRO2) and cerebral glucose utilization (CMRGlc) was studied in normal subjects using positron emission tomography (PET) and the 15O steady-state inhalation and the [18F]fluoro deoxyglucose method. The use of standard sets of rate constants and the model lumped constant of 0.52 as well as the regional blood-brain partition coefficient for water and the blood volume correction for oxygen extraction fraction provided a CMRO2/CMRGcl ratio of 4.89 in the cortical gray matter, 5.27 in the basal ganglia and 5.82 in the centrum semiovale (white matter). The values of CMRO2/CMRGlc for the basal ganglia and the white matter were consistent with those reported for the whole brain with the Kety-Schmidt method. There was no significant difference in the CMRO2/CMRGlc between the basal ganglia and the white matter indicating the similar nature of in vivo oxidative metabolism of glucose in neuron-rich region and glial cell-rich region.

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Hatazawa, J., Ito, M., Matsuzawa, T., Ido, T., & Watanuki, S. I. (1988). Measurement of the ratio of cerebral oxygen consumption to glucose utilization by positron emission tomography: Its consistency with the values determined by the Kety-Schmidt method in normal volunteers. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, 8(3), 426–432. https://doi.org/10.1038/jcbfm.1988.79

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