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Association of Metabolite Concentrations and Water Diffusivity in Normal Appearing Brain Tissue with Glioma Grade
Author(s) -
Maudsley Andrew A.,
Roy Bhaswati,
Gupta Rakesh K.,
Sheriff Sulaiman,
Awasthi Rishi,
Gu Meng,
Husain Nuzhat,
Mohakud Sudipa,
Behari Sanjay,
Spielman Daniel M.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of neuroimaging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.822
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1552-6569
pISSN - 1051-2284
DOI - 10.1111/jon.12063
Subject(s) - white matter , metabolite , glioma , medicine , creatine , choline , nuclear medicine , diffusion mri , brain tissue , pathology , magnetic resonance imaging , radiology , cancer research
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Studies of brain tumors have identified altered tissue metabolism and water diffusion in MRI normal appearing tissue regions. In this retrospective study the relationship of these imaging measures with tumor grade in gliomas was investigated. METHODS MR spectroscopic imaging of whole brain and mean diffusivity (MD) measurements were obtained in subjects with untreated glioma and from normal control subjects. Mean metabolite values for N‐acetylaspartate (NAA), total creatine (Cre), and total choline (Cho) were obtained in gray‐ and white‐matter regions for the hemisphere contralateral to the tumor location, and MD values were obtained from contralateral normal‐appearing white matter. Analyses tested for differences in mean values between subject groups while accounting for age. RESULTS Analysis demonstrated increased NAA/Cre and MD, and decreased Cho/NAA for all tumor grades relative to control values. Differences between tumor grades were also observed for NAA, NAA/Cre, and Cho/NAA. Abnormal values of water diffusion were also observed, but with only a weak association between alterations in diffusion and tissue metabolites. CONCLUSIONS This study supports previous observations of altered tissue metabolism and water diffusion in normal‐appearing white matter while additionally finding differences of metabolite values in gray matter and an association with tumor grade.