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Does hydration status affect MRI measures of brain volume or water content?
Author(s) -
Meyers Sandra M.,
Tam Roger,
Lee Jimmy S.,
Kolind Shan H.,
Vavasour Irene M.,
Mackie Emilie,
Zhao Yinshan,
Laule Cornelia,
Mädler Burkhard,
Li David K.B.,
MacKay Alex L.,
Traboulsee Anthony L.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of magnetic resonance imaging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.563
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1522-2586
pISSN - 1053-1807
DOI - 10.1002/jmri.25168
Subject(s) - brain size , urine specific gravity , medicine , magnetic resonance imaging , nuclear medicine , neuroimaging , reproducibility , body water , dehydration , urine , partial volume , radiology , body weight , chemistry , chromatography , biochemistry , psychiatry
Purpose To determine whether differences in hydration state, which could arise from routine clinical procedures such as overnight fasting, affect brain total water content (TWC) and brain volume measured with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Materials and Methods Twenty healthy volunteers were scanned with a 3T MR scanner four times: day 1, baseline scan; day 2, hydrated scan after consuming 3L of water over 12 hours; day 3, dehydrated scan after overnight fasting of 9 hours, followed by another scan 1 hour later for reproducibility. The following MRI data were collected: T 2 relaxation (for TWC measurement), inversion recovery (for T 1 measurement), and 3D T 1 ‐weighted (for brain volumes). Body weight and urine specific gravity were also measured. TWC was calculated by fitting the T 2 relaxation data with a nonnegative least‐squares algorithm, with corrections for T 1 relaxation and image signal inhomogeneity and normalization to ventricular cerebrospinal fluid. Brain volume changes were measured using SIENA. TWC means were calculated within 14 tissue regions. Results Despite indications of dehydration as demonstrated by increases in urine specific gravity ( P = 0.03) and decreases in body weight ( P = 0.001) between hydrated and dehydrated scans, there was no measurable change in TWC (within any brain region) or brain volume between hydration states. Conclusion We demonstrate that within a range of physiologic conditions commonly encountered in routine clinical scans (no pretreatment with hydration, well hydrated before MRI, and overnight fasting), brain TWC and brain volumes are not substantially affected in a healthy control cohort. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2016;44:296–304.