Proton nuclear magnetic resonance J-spectroscopy of phantoms containing brain metabolites on a portable 0.05 T MRI scanner

Publication date

2020-11

Authors

Ronen, Itamar
O'Reilly, Thomas
Froeling, MartijnORCID 0000-0003-3841-0497
Webb, Andrew G

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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Abstract

We examined approaches for obtaining 1H NMR spectra of brain metabolites on a low-field (B0 = 0.05 T) portable MRI scanner, which was developed in our laboratory with the aim of bringing cost-effective radiological services to populations in underserved, remote regions. The low static magnetic field B0 dictates low signal to noise ratio for metabolites in the mM concentration range, and results in an overall spectral region for the 1H resonances of these metabolites narrower than the linewidth obtainable in our scanner. The narrow spectral range also precludes the possibility of suppressing the large contribution of the water resonance at the acquisition stage. We used a spectroscopic Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) sequence to acquire multiecho data from solutions of J-coupled brain metabolites, focusing on lactic acid, a metabolite whose concentration is negligible in the healthy brain and increases significantly in several disease conditions. The J spectra we obtained for lactate from the Fourier transformation of the multiecho data are spectrally well-resolved for a range of echo spacing values. We show that the J spectra at different echo spacings fit well with simulations of the evolution of echo train signal of the lactate under the same conditions. Applying a J-refocused variant of the CPMG sequence, the J modulation of the echo decay is removed, providing a way for subtracting the large contribution of the non-modulated component in the J spectrum in conditions where notching it using post-processing methods is impossible. We also demonstrate by means of experimental data and simulations that in our experimental conditions, J-spectra of other prominent brain metabolites, such as the neurotransmitter glutamate, do not yield discernible peaks and only contribute to a broad peak at zero frequency.

Keywords

Brain metabolites, J-spectroscopy, Low field MRI, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Condensed Matter Physics, Nuclear and High Energy Physics, Biophysics, Biochemistry, Journal Article

Citation

Ronen, I, O'Reilly, T, Froeling, M & Webb, A G 2020, 'Proton nuclear magnetic resonance J-spectroscopy of phantoms containing brain metabolites on a portable 0.05 T MRI scanner', Journal of Magnetic Resonance, vol. 320, 106834. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmr.2020.106834