Variability by region and method in human brain sodium concentrations estimated by 23Na magnetic resonance imaging: a meta-analysis

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Abstract

Sodium imaging (23Na-MRI) is of interest in neurological conditions given potential sensitivity to the physiological and metabolic status of tissues. Benchmarks have so far been restricted to parenchyma or grey/white matter (GM/WM). We investigate (1) the availability of evidence, (2) regional pooled estimates and (3) variability attributable to region/methodology. MEDLINE literature search for tissue sodium concentration (TSC) measured in specified ‘healthy’ brain regions returned 127 reports, plus 278 retrieved from bibliographies. 28 studies met inclusion criteria, including 400 individuals. Reporting variability led to nested data structure, so we used multilevel meta-analysis and a random effects model to pool effect sizes. The pooled mean from 141 TSC estimates was 40.51 mM (95% CI 37.59–43.44; p < 0.001, I2Total=99.4%). Tissue as a moderator was significant (F214 = 65.34, p-val

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Ridley, B., Morsillo, F., Zaaraoui, W., & Nonino, F. (2023). Variability by region and method in human brain sodium concentrations estimated by 23Na magnetic resonance imaging: a meta-analysis. Scientific Reports, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-30363-y

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