| Literature DB >> 24736171 |
Steven Deleye1, Jeroen Verhaeghe2, Leonie wyffels3, Stefanie Dedeurwaerdere4, Sigrid Stroobants5, Steven Staelens6.
Abstract
The standard uptake value (SUV), commonly used to quantify (18)F-FluoroDeoxyGlucose (FDG) uptake in small animal brain PET imaging, is affected by many factors. In this study the influence of fasting times, inter-scan duration and repetitive scanning on the variability of different SUV measures is investigated. Additionally it is demonstrated that these variables could adversely influence the outcome of a pharmacological challenge when not accounted for. Naive Sprague-Dawley rats (n=20) were randomly divided into five different fasting groups (no fasting up to 24h of fasting). SUV brain uptake values were reproducible in naive animals when a fasting period of at least 12h is used and for shorter fasting periods SUV values need to be corrected for the glucose level. Additionally, a separate animal group (n=6) was sufficiently fasted for 16h and in a longitudinal setting being scanned six times in three weeks. Especially with short inter-scan durations, increasing glucose levels were found over time which was attributed to increased stress due to repeated food deprivation, altered food intake or scan manipulations. As a result, even with controlled and sufficient fasting, blood glucose levels should be taken into account for data quantification. Strikingly, even the brain activation effects of an NMDA-antagonist challenge with memantine could not be detected in experiments with a short inter-scan duration if glucose levels were not taken into account. Correcting for glucose levels decreases the inter- and intra-animal variability for rat brain imaging. SUV corrected for glucose levels yields the lowest inter-animal variation. However, if the body weight changes significantly, as in a long experiment, quantification based on the glucose corrected percentage injected dose (and not SUV) is recommendable as this yields the lowest intra-animal variation.Entities:
Keywords: (18) F-FDG; Brain; Glucose; PET; Rat; SUV
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24736171 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.04.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroimage ISSN: 1053-8119 Impact factor: 6.556