Measurement of brain lactate during visual stimulation using a long TE semi-LASER sequence at 7 T

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Abstract

Estimation of metabolic changes during neuronal activation represents a challenge for in vivo MRS, especially for metabolites with low concentration and signal overlap, such as lactate. In this work, we aimed to evaluate the feasibility of detecting lactate during brain activation using a long (Formula presented.) (144 ms) semi-LASER sequence at 7 T. (Formula presented.) spectra were acquired on healthy volunteers ((Formula presented.)) during a paradigm with 15 min of visual stimulation. Outer-volume signals were further attenuated by the use of saturation slabs, and macromolecular signals in the vicinity of the inverted lactate peak were individually fitted with simulated Lorentzian peaks. All spectra were free of artefacts and highly reproducible across subjects. Lactate was accurately quantified with an average Cramér-Rao lower bound of 8%. Statistically significant ((Formula presented.), one-tailed (Formula presented.) -test) increases in lactate ((Formula presented.) 10%) and glutamate ((Formula presented.) 3%) levels during stimulation were detected in the visual cortex. Lactate and glutamate changes were consistent with previous measurements. We demonstrated that quantification of a clear and non-contaminated lactate peak obtained with a long TE sequence has the potential of improving the accuracy of functional MRS studies targeting non-oxidative reaction pathways.

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Fernandes, C. C., Lanz, B., Chen, C., & Morris, P. G. (2020). Measurement of brain lactate during visual stimulation using a long TE semi-LASER sequence at 7 T. NMR in Biomedicine, 33(4). https://doi.org/10.1002/nbm.4223

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