The Partial Volume Effect in the Quantification of 1H Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy in Alzheimer's Disease and Aging
Author(s) -
Virginia MatoAbad,
Alicia Quirós,
Roberto GarcíaÁlvarez,
Javier Pereira,
Juan ÁlvarezLinera,
Ana Frank,
Juan A. HernándezTamames
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of alzheimer s disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.677
H-Index - 139
eISSN - 1875-8908
pISSN - 1387-2877
DOI - 10.3233/jad-140582
Subject(s) - partial volume , grey matter , voxel , atrophy , white matter , magnetic resonance imaging , voxel based morphometry , neurodegeneration , alzheimer's disease , disease , dementia , cognitive impairment , nuclear medicine , audiology , medicine , psychology , pathology , radiology
1H-MRS variability increases due to normal aging and also as a result of atrophy in grey and white matter caused by neurodegeneration. In this work, an automatic process was developed to integrate data from spectra and high-resolution anatomical images to quantify metabolites, taking into account tissue partial volumes within the voxel of interest avoiding additional spectra acquisitions required for partial volume correction. To evaluate this method, we use a cohort of 135 subjects (47 male and 88 female, aged between 57 and 99 years) classified into 4 groups: 38 healthy participants, 20 amnesic mild cognitive impairment patients, 22 multi-domain mild cognitive impairment patients, and 55 Alzheimer's disease patients. Our findings suggest that knowing the voxel composition of white and grey matter and cerebrospinal fluid is necessary to avoid partial volume variations in a single-voxel study and to decrease part of the variability found in metabolites quantification, particularly in those studies involving elder patients and neurodegenerative diseases. The proposed method facilitates the use of 1H-MRS techniques in statistical studies in Alzheimer's disease, because it provides more accurate quantitative measurements, reduces the inter-subject variability, and improves statistical results when performing group comparisons.
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