Abstract

Phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P-MRS) is a unique non-invasive imaging modality for probing in vivo high-energy phosphate metabolism in the human heart. We investigated whether current 31P-MRS methodology would allow for clinical applications to detect exercise-induced changes in (patho-)physiological myocardial energy metabolism. Hereto, measurement variability and repeatability of three commonly used localized 31P-MRS methods [3D image-selected in vivo spectroscopy (ISIS) and 1D ISIS with 1D chemical shift imaging (CSI) oriented either perpendicular or parallel to the surface coil] to quantify the myocardial phosphocreatine (PCr) to adenosine triphosphate (ATP) ratio in healthy humans (n = 8) at rest were determined on a clinical 3 Tesla MR system. Numerical simulations of myocardial energy homeostasis in response to increased cardiac work rates were performed using a biophysical model of myocardial oxidative metabolism. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy was modeled by either inefficient sarcomere ATP utilization or decreased mitochondrial ATP synthesis. The effect of creatine depletion on myocardial energy homeostasis was explored for both conditions. The mean in vivo myocardial PCr/ATP ratio measured with 3D ISIS was 1.57 ± 0.17 with a large repeatability coefficient of 40.4%. For 1D CSI in a 1D ISIS-selected slice perpendicular to the surface coil, the PCr/ATP ratio was 2.78 ± 0.50 (repeatability 42.5%). With 1D CSI in a 1D ISIS-selected slice parallel to the surface coil, the PCr/ATP ratio was 1.70 ± 0.56 (repeatability 43.7%). The model predicted a PCr/ATP ratio reduction of only 10% at the maximal cardiac work rate in normal myocardium. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy led to lower PCr/ATP ratios for high cardiac work rates, which was exacerbated by creatine depletion. Simulations illustrated that when conducting cardiac 31P-MRS exercise stress testing with large measurement error margins, results obtained under pathophysiologic conditions may still lie well within the 95% confidence interval of normal myocardial PCr/ATP dynamics. Current measurement precision of localized 31P-MRS for quantification of the myocardial PCr/ATP ratio precludes the detection of the changes predicted by computational modeling. This hampers clinical employment of 31P-MRS for diagnostic testing and risk stratification, and warrants developments in cardiac 31P-MRS exercise stress testing methodology.

Highlights

  • The human heart requires a continuous and adequate supply of energy to guarantee myocardial contractility that is required to support blood circulation

  • Our findings show that improvements of the phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P-MRS) measurement precision combined with in-magnet exercise at high intensities will be required for such investigations to become of diagnostic merit

  • Our results show that with the level of precision achieved by current methodology, altered energy homeostasis under pathophysiologic conditions such as decreased mitochondrial capacity or inefficient sarcomere energy utilization may not be detectable with cardiac 31P-MRS stress testing

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Summary

Introduction

The human heart requires a continuous and adequate supply of energy to guarantee myocardial contractility that is required to support blood circulation. Phosphorus-31 MRS (31P-MRS) is a non-invasive and non-ionizing imaging modality that is uniquely capable of probing in vivo myocardial high-energy phosphate metabolism. This technique can quantify the steady-state myocardial phosphocreatine (PCr) over ATP concentration ratio (Bottomley, 2007), which has been commonly used to characterize the in vivo myocardial energy status. The PCr/ATP ratio is assumed to correlate with the cytosolic Gibbs free energy of ATP hydrolysis ( GP), the energy available to cardiomyocytes to do work This assumption is valid, if and only if, the myocardial creatine content is either known or can be assumed to be unchanged compared with healthy hearts (Wu et al, 2009). Measurements of the myocardial PCr/ATP ratio at multiple steady-states or during transition between steady-states of cardiac work may unmask underlying energy deficits in heart disease (Dass et al, 2015)

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