Abstract

Purpose Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) or brain parenchyma lactate detection is important for the diagnosis of some diseases with aerobic cellular metabolism compromise. Our purpose is to correlate intraventricular magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) lactate detection and quantification to CSF and blood lactate concentration. Methods Twenty-one patients (13 females; mean age 5 years) suspected of having mitochondrial disorders underwent proton MRS with point-resolved spectroscopy (TE = 144 ms). The volume of interest was positioned in the lateral ventricles, and LCModel was used for the MRS lactate peak detection and quantification. CSF and venous blood samples were obtained for lactate quantification immediately after MRS. Comparisons between MRS, CSF, and blood lactate detection and quantification were performed. p Results In our series, CSF lactate levels were high in 11 patients (52%) and blood serum lactate levels were high in 3 patients (14%). MRS was able to detect a lactate peak in all patients. A positive correlation between MRS lactate quantification and CSF lactate was observed (Pearson correlation coefficient = 0.750; p Conclusion If MRS shows increased lactate levels in the ventricles, CSF puncture is not needed for lactate increase confirmation.

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