Abstract

Complex congenital heart disease (CHD) is associated with neurodevelopmental impairment, the mechanism of which is unknown. Cerebral cortical dysmaturation in CHD is linked to white matter abnormalities, including developmental vulnerability of the subplate, in relation to oxygen delivery and metabolism deficits. In this study, we report associations between subcortical morphology and white matter metabolism in neonates with CHD using quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and spectroscopy (MRS). Multi-modal brain imaging was performed in three groups of neonates close to term-equivalent age: (1) term CHD (n = 56); (2) preterm CHD (n = 37) and (3) preterm control group (n = 22). Thalamic volume and cerebellar transverse diameter were obtained in relation to cerebral metrics and white matter metabolism. Short echo single-voxel MRS of parietal and frontal white matter was used to quantitate metabolites related to brain maturation (n-acetyl aspartate [NAA], choline, myo-inositol), neurotransmitter (glutamate), and energy metabolism (glutamine, citrate, creatine and lactate). Multi-variate regression was performed to delineate associations between subcortical morphological measurements and white matter metabolism controlling for age and white matter injury. Reduced thalamic volume, most pronounced in the preterm control group, was associated with increased citrate levels in all three group in the parietal white matter. In contrast, reduced cerebellar volume, most pronounced in the preterm CHD group, was associated with reduced glutamine in parietal grey matter in both CHD groups. Single ventricle anatomy, aortic arch obstruction, and cyanotic lesion were predictive of the relationship between reduced subcortical morphometry and reduced GLX (particularly glutamine) in both CHD cohorts (frontal white matter and parietal grey matter). Subcortical morphological associations with brain metabolism were also distinct within each of the three groups, suggesting these relationships in the CHD groups were not directly related to prematurity or white matter injury alone. Taken together, these findings suggest that subplate vulnerability in CHD is likely relevant to understanding the mechanism of both cortical and subcortical dysmaturation in CHD infants. Future work is needed to link this potential pattern of encephalopathy of CHD (including the constellation of grey matter, white matter and brain metabolism deficits) to not only abnormal fetal substrate delivery and oxygen conformance, but also regional deficits in cerebral energy metabolism.

Highlights

  • We used quantitative multi-modal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) in infants with congenital heart disease (CHD) to test the hypothesis that subcortical morphological measurements are associated with selective metabolic cerebral white matter alterations

  • 1/3 of the MRI scans were pre-operative and 2/3 of the MRI scan were post-operative in both the term and preterm CHD groups

  • For the first time, we delineate in vivo associations between subcortical morphological reductions and altered cerebral white matter metabolism in both preterm and term CHD infants

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Summary

Introduction

We used quantitative multi-modal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) in infants with CHD to test the hypothesis that subcortical morphological measurements are associated with selective metabolic cerebral white matter alterations. We used quantitative short echo MRS, which allows for measurement of parietal and frontal white matter metabolites related to brain maturation (n-acetyl aspartate [NAA], choline, and myo-inositol), neurotransmitters (glutamate) and energy metabolism (glutamine, citrate, creatine, lactate)[12,16,17,18,19,20,21]. We hypothesized that: (1) reduced subcortical morphology would be associated with global alterations in cerebral white matter maturation related metabolites (reduced NAA, elevated myo-inositol and choline) representing global metabolic brain dysmaturation similar to premature infants; (2) reduced subcortical morphology would be associated with selected alterations in cerebral white matter energy metabolites (creatine, lactate, citrate, glutamine) in the presence of punctate white matter lesions

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