4.4 Article

MEGA-PRESS of GABA plus : Influences of acquisition parameters

Journal

NMR IN BIOMEDICINE
Volume 34, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/nbm.4199

Keywords

editing; GABA; homocarnosine; lysine; macromolecules; magnetic resonance spectroscopy

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [P30 NS076408, P41 EB015894]

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The study simulated the relative signal contributions of GABA, MM, and homocarnosine in GABA-edited spectroscopy. Different acquisition parameters were examined for their influences on the constituents of GABA+ to investigate brain GABA concentration differences in healthy and diseased individuals using modern experimental designs.
gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) was the first molecule that was edited with MEGA-PRESS. GABA edited spectroscopy is challenged by limited selectivity of editing pulses. Coediting of resonances from macromolecules (MM) is the greatest single limitation of GABA edited spectroscopy. In this contribution, relative signal contributions from GABA, MM and homocarnosine to the total MEGA-PRESS edited signal at similar to 3 ppm, i.e., GABA+, are simulated at 3 tesla using several acquisition schemes. The base scheme is modeled after those currently supplied by vendors: it uses typical pulse shapes and lengths, it minimizes the first echo time (TE), and the delay between the editing pulses is kept at TE/2. Edited spectra are simulated for imperfect acquisition parameters such as incorrect frequency, larger chemical shift displacement, incorrect transmit B-1-field calibration for localization and editing pulses, and longer TE. An alternative timing scheme and longer editing pulses are also considered. Additional simulations are performed for symmetric editing around the MM frequency to suppress the MM signal. The relative influences of these acquisition parameters on the constituents of GABA+ are examined from the perspective of modern experimental designs for investigating brain GABA concentration differences in healthy and diseased humans. Other factors that influence signal contributions, such as T-1 and T-2 relaxation times are also considered.

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