Abstract

Phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((31)P-MRS) combined with visual stimulation in functional experiments allows the non-invasive dynamic study of brain energy metabolism. (31)P-MRS has been applied to several diseases and to healthy subjects, but works have shown variable findings and non-reproducible results, possibly caused by low numbers of subjects combined with different stimulation paradigms. In the present work, we used (31)P-MRS at 3T with two different visual stimulation protocols with different block duration ("short" and "long") to evaluate metabolic changes under different workloads in 38 healthy subjects. We found a 15% (short protocol-blocks of 1.5min stimulation) and 3% (long protocol-blocks of 5min stimulation) increase in the inorganic phosphate (Pi) to α-adenosine triphosphate (α-ATP) ratio, and a 5% (short protocol) and 2% (long protocol) decrease in the nicotinamide adenine nucleotide (NADH+NAD(+)) to α-ATP ratio. The NADH+NAD(+) results are, to the best of our knowledge, the first functional magnetic resonance spectroscopy in vivo assessment of these compounds, but their interpretation is difficult since they cannot be separately quantified at 3T. Our results show that longer stimulations produce smaller concentration changes in Pi/α-ATP and (NADH+NAD(+))/α-ATP ratios, which suggests a possible adaptation effect during longer stimulations that leads metabolic concentrations towards the initial equilibrium.

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