Abstract

To compare point-resolved spectroscopy (PRESS) and localized two-dimensional (2D) correlated spectroscopy (L-COSY) in the detection of cerebral metabolites in humans on a clinical scanner at 3T and to estimate their respective inter- and intrasubject variances. Measurements were made on nine healthy subjects to assess intersubject variance, and daily on a single subject over a period of seven days to assess intrasubject variance. All L-COSY measurements were performed with a voxel size of 27 mL (3 x 3 x 3 cm(3)) and a measurement time of approximately 34 minutes in the occipitoparietal lobe of the brain. Relative metabolite concentrations were estimated with respect to N-methyl creatine. While the sensitivity of PRESS is twice that of L-COSY, the greater spectral resolution offered by L-COSY resulted in greater consistency in estimates of the concentrations of several cerebral metabolites, as indicated by a superior intraclass correlation and a significantly lower standard deviation (SD) in a matched pair intrasubject analysis. Our pilot results demonstrate that L-COSY is an effective approach for resolving cerebral metabolites, and demonstrates a lower coefficient of variance (CV) than the conventional 1D localized spectroscopic approach using LC Model for quantification.

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