Abstract

This study compared metabolic differences in the frontal brain of depressed patients versus age- and sex-matched controls using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy and absolute quantification of metabolites (NAA, Cr, Cho, mI) at 3 Tesla. Short-echo-time stimulated echo acquisition mode (TE/TM/TR=20/30/6000 milliseconds) was applied in the prefrontal region of 17 depressed patients and 17 age- and sex-matched controls. Metabolic ratios, ie, N-acetyl-aspartate/creatine (Cr), choline/Cr, and myo-inositol/Cr, and absolute concentrations (using internal water as a reference together with LCModel-based spectra fitting) were calculated and compared between groups and published reference data. Metabolic ratios showed significantly lower N-acetyl-aspartate/Cr (P = 0.016/0.006, left/right), choline/Cr (P = n.s./0.016), and myo-inositol/Cr (P = 0.022/0.026) for depressive patients versus controls. However, depressive patients showed significantly higher absolute concentrations of Cr (P = 0.017/0.0004) compared with controls with no differences in all other metabolites estimated. The authors demonstrate that absolute quantification of metabolite concentration is essential in properly identifying pathologic differences of brain metabolites in depression.

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