| Literature DB >> 22844602 |
Rajakumar Nagarajan1, Manoj K Sarma, April D Thames, Steven A Castellon, Charles H Hinkin, M Albert Thomas.
Abstract
There is an evidence of neurocognitive dysfunction even in the absence of advanced liver disease in chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Brain metabolism has been investigated non-invasively using one-dimensional (1D) in vivo Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) over three decades. Even though highly concentrated cerebral metabolites (N-acetylaspartate, creatine, choline, glutamate/glutamine, myo-inositol) have been detected using MRS, other metabolites at low concentrations (~1-3 mM or less) including glutathione, aspartate and GABA are quite difficult to observe using 1D MRS. In order to resolve overlapping resonances from a number of metabolites, a remedy is to add a second spectral dimension to the existing 1D MRS. Localized two-dimensional correlated spectroscopy (L-COSY) has been developed over the last decade to enhance the spectral dispersion by using the second spectral dimension. We have evaluated this L-COSY technique in the frontal white/gray matter regions of 14 HCV+ (mean age of 56.2 years) and 14 HCV- (mean age of 46.6 years) subjects. Our preliminary results showed significantly increased myo-inositol and glutathione in the HCV+ compared to the HCV- subjects. Hence, glutathione and myo-inositol should be considered along with other metabolites as important markers of inflammation.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22844602 PMCID: PMC3403451 DOI: 10.1155/2012/179365
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hepatol
Figure 1The axial MRI with MRS voxel location of a 64 years old HCV+ patient.
Figure 2A representative 2D L-COSY spectrum of a 64 years old HCV+ patient.
Figure 3A representative 2D L-COSY spectrum of a 54 years old healthy control.
Metabolite changes between healthy controls and HCV+ patients calculated from the 2D L-COSY data.
| Metabolites/Cr | Healthy controls (mean ± SD) | HCV+ patients (mean ± SD) |
|---|---|---|
| tNAA | 1.405 ± 0.153 | 1.303 ± 0.253 |
| tCh | 0.291 ± 0.092 | 0.331 ± 0.126 |
| Glu+Gln | 1.838 ± 0.310 | 1.780 ± 0.582 |
| mI† | 1.056 ± 0.237 | 1.311 ± 0.264 |
| Scy | 0.089 ± 0.049 | 0.094 ± 0.035 |
| GSH† | 0.140 ± 0.040 | 0.243 ± 0.090 |
| Glu | 1.585 ± 0.447 | 1.631 ± 0.546 |
| GABA | 0.371 ± 0.226 | 0.331 ± 0.137 |
| Asp | 0.398 ± 0.070 | 0.417 ± 0.080 |
| GPC | 0.166 ± 0.074 | 0.176 ± 0.047 |
† P value < 0.05.
Figure 4Box and Whisker plots of mI and GSH between healthy controls and HCV+ patients.
Figure 5Box and Whisker plots of selected metabolites changes between healthy controls and HCV+ patients.