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1 H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) as a tool to measure dehydration in mice
Author(s) -
Li Matthew,
Vassiliou Christophoros C.,
Colucci Lina A.,
Cima Michael J.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nmr in biomedicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.278
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1099-1492
pISSN - 0952-3480
DOI - 10.1002/nbm.3334
Subject(s) - dehydration , chemistry , body water , adipose tissue , weight loss , body fluid , urine , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , relaxometry , magnetic resonance imaging , nuclear magnetic resonance , body weight , nuclear medicine , medicine , biochemistry , radiology , physics , organic chemistry , spin echo , obesity
  Dehydration is a prevalent pathology, where loss of bodily water can result in variable symptoms. Symptoms can range from simple thirst to dire scenarios involving loss of consciousness. Clinical methods exist that assess dehydration from qualitative weight changes to more quantitative osmolality measurements. These methods are imprecise, invasive, and/or easily confounded, despite being practiced clinically. We investigate a non‐invasive, non‐imaging 1 H NMR method of assessing dehydration that attempts to address issues with existing clinical methods. Dehydration was achieved by exposing mice ( n  = 16) to a thermally elevated environment (37 °C) for up to 7.5 h (0.11–13% weight loss). Whole body NMR measurements were made using a Bruker LF50 BCA‐Analyzer before and after dehydration. Physical lean tissue, adipose, and free water compartment approximations had NMR values extracted from relaxation data through a multi‐exponential fitting method. Changes in before/after NMR values were compared with clinically practiced metrics of weight loss (percent dehydration) as well as blood and urine osmolality. A linear correlation between tissue relaxometry and both animal percent dehydration and urine osmolality was observed in lean tissue, but not adipose or free fluids. Calculated R 2 values for percent dehydration were 0.8619 (lean, P  < 0.0001), 0.5609 (adipose, P  = 0.0008), and 0.0644 (free fluids, P  = 0.3445). R 2 values for urine osmolality were 0.7760 (lean, P  < 0.0001), 0.5005 (adipose, P  = 0.0022), and 0.0568 (free fluids, P  = 0.3739). These results suggest that non‐imaging 1 H NMR methods are capable of non‐invasively assessing dehydration in live animals. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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