4.7 Article

Prospective frequency and motion correction for edited 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 233, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.117922

Keywords

Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA); Glutathione (GSH); HERMES; PRESS

Funding

  1. Danish Council for Independent Research [611100349A]

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GABA and GSH play crucial roles in brain functioning and are involved in various neurodegenerative and psychiatric diseases. MRS is a unique non-invasive method to measure these neurometabolites, but motion stabilization is important, especially for specific patient groups. Spectral editing techniques are typically used for unambiguous detection of GABA and GSH, although they increase motion sensitivity.
The major inhibitory neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and the dominant antioxidant glutathione (GSH) both play a crucial role in brain functioning and are involved in several neurodegenerative and psychiatric diseases. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) is a unique way to measure these neurometabolites non-invasively, but the measurement is highly sensitive to head movements, and especially in specific patient groups, motion stabilization in MRS could be valuable. Conventional MRS is acquired at relatively short echo times (TE), however, for unambiguous detection of GABA and GSH, spectral editing techniques are typically used. These depend on longer TEs and use frequency selective spectral editing pulses to separate the low-intensity peaks of GABA and GSH from overlapping resonances, but results in further increased motion sensitivity. Lowintensity metabolite peaks are usually edited one-by-one, however, simultaneous editing of multiple metabolites can be achieved using a Hadamard scheme, resulting in a substantial reduction in scan time. To investigate and correct for motion sensitivity in both conventional short-TE MRS (PRESS) and edited MRS (HERMES), we implemented a navigator-based prospective motion correction strategy including reacquisition of corrupted data. PRESS and HERMES spectra were acquired without motion, with motion with correction (repeated twice), and with motion without correction. Results indicate that when sufficient retrospective outlier removal is used, no significant differences in concentration and spectral quality were observed between motion conditions, even without prospective correction. HERMES spectral editing data showed to be more sensitive to motion, as significant differences in metabolite estimates and variability of spectral quality measures were observed for tCr, GABA + and GSH when only retrospective outlier removal was applied. When using both prospective and retrospective correction, spectral quality was improved to almost the level of the no-motion acquisition. No differences in metabolite ratios for GABA and GSH could be observed when using motion correction. In conclusion, edited MRS showed to be more prone to motion artifacts, and prospective motion correction can restore most of the spectral quality in both conventional and edited MRS.

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