Abstract

BackgroundPhosphorus saturation transfer (ST) magnetic resonance spectroscopy can measure the rate of ATP generated from phosphocreatine (PCr) via creatine kinase (CK) in the human heart. Recently, the triple-repetition time ST (TRiST) method was introduced to measure the CK pseudo-first-order rate constant kf in three acquisitions. In TRiST, the longitudinal relaxation time of PCr while γ-ATP is saturated, T1`, is measured for each subject, but suffers from low SNR because the PCr signal is reduced due to exchange with saturated γ-ATP, and the short repetition time of one of the acquisitions. Here, a two-repetition time ST (TwiST) method is presented. In TwiST, the acquisition with γ-ATP saturation and short repetition time is dropped. Instead of measuring T1`, an intrinsic relaxation time T1 for PCr, T1intrinsic, is assumed. The objective was to validate TwiST measurements of CK kinetics in healthy subjects and patients with heart failure (HF).MethodsBloch equation simulations that included the effect of spillover irradiation on PCr were used to derive formulae for T1intrinsic and kf measured by both TRiST and TwiST methods. Spillover was quantified from an unsaturated PCr measurement used in the current protocol for determining PCr and ATP concentrations. Cardiac TRiST and TwiST data were acquired at 3 T from 12 healthy and 17 HF patients.ResultsSimulations showed that both kf measured by TwiST and T1intrinsic require spill-over corrections. In human heart at 3 T, the spill-over corrected T1intrinsic = 8.4 ± 1.4 s (mean ± SD) independent of study group. TwiST and TRiST kf measurements were the same, but TwiST was 9 min faster. Spill-over corrected TwiST kf was 0.33 ± 0.08 s−1 vs. 0.20 ± 0.06 s−1 in healthy vs HF hearts, respectively (p < 0.0001).ConclusionTwiST was validated against TRiST in the human heart at 3 T, generating the same results 9 min faster. TwiST detected significant reductions in CK kf in HF compared to healthy subjects, consistent with prior 1.5 T studies using different methodology.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12968-015-0175-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Phosphorus saturation transfer (ST) magnetic resonance spectroscopy can measure the rate of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) generated from phosphocreatine (PCr) via creatine kinase (CK) in the human heart

  • The expected noise-induced standard deviation (SD) at the TRs used in the present study is 8.3 % compared to 13.4 % for triple-repetition time ST (TRiST) [7]

  • The results show significant reductions in cardiac CK reactionrates that are in quantitative agreement with prior measurements obtained at 1.5 T, where kf was 0.21 ± 0.07 s−1 in heart failure (HF) patients compared to 0.32 ± 0.07 s−1 in healthy subjects [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Phosphorus saturation transfer (ST) magnetic resonance spectroscopy can measure the rate of ATP generated from phosphocreatine (PCr) via creatine kinase (CK) in the human heart. The triple-repetition time ST (TRiST) method was introduced to measure the CK pseudo-first-order rate constant kf in three acquisitions. 31P ST MRS using the Four Angle Saturation Transfer (FAST; [3]) protocol at 1.5 T enabled human cardiac CK kinetic studies for the first time and identified significant reductions in cardiac kf in patients with heart failure (HF). Using TRiST, T1` and M0` are measured by the dual-repetition time (TR) method [8] with a short TR (M(TRshort); TRshort = 2 heart beats, cardiac-gated) and a long TR (M(TRlong); TRlong ~10 s, cardiac-gated) both while the exchanging γ-ATP resonance is saturated. Equation [1] is written as:

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