| Literature DB >> 25296331 |
Katja Heinicke1, Ivan E Dimitrov2, Nadine Romain3, Sergey Cheshkov4, Jimin Ren4, Craig R Malloy4, Ronald G Haller5.
Abstract
Carbon-13 magnetic resonance spectroscopy (13C MRS) offers a noninvasive method to assess glycogen levels in skeletal muscle and to identify excess glycogen accumulation in patients with glycogen storage disease (GSD). Despite the clinical potential of the method, it is currently not widely used for diagnosis or for follow-up of treatment. While it is possible to perform acceptable 13C MRS at lower fields, the low natural abundance of 13C and the inherently low signal-to-noise ratio of 13C MRS makes it desirable to utilize the advantage of increased signal strength offered by ultra-high fields for more accurate measurements. Concomitant with this advantage, however, ultra-high fields present unique technical challenges that need to be addressed when studying glycogen. In particular, the question of measurement reproducibility needs to be answered so as to give investigators insight into meaningful inter-subject glycogen differences. We measured muscle glycogen levels in vivo in the calf muscle in three patients with McArdle disease (MD), one patient with phosphofructokinase deficiency (PFKD) and four healthy controls by performing 13C MRS at 7T. Absolute quantification of the MRS signal was achieved by using a reference phantom with known concentration of metabolites. Muscle glycogen concentration was increased in GSD patients (31.5±2.9 g/kg w. w.) compared with controls (12.4±2.2 g/kg w. w.). In three GSD patients glycogen was also determined biochemically in muscle homogenates from needle biopsies and showed a similar 2.5-fold increase in muscle glycogen concentration in GSD patients compared with controls. Repeated inter-subject glycogen measurements yield a coefficient of variability of 5.18%, while repeated phantom measurements yield a lower 3.2% system variability. We conclude that noninvasive ultra-high field 13C MRS provides a valuable, highly reproducible tool for quantitative assessment of glycogen levels in health and disease.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25296331 PMCID: PMC4189928 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0108706
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 113C MRS spectra of glycogen and creatine (Cr)/phosphocreatine (PCr) in calf muscle showing glycogen accumulation in a patient with muscle phosphofructokinase deficiency (PFKD) compared with a healthy control subject and the reference quantification phantom at 7T.
The observed doublet for the acetate reference is due to the C1-C2 coupling. An axial image of the calf showing the internal acetate phantom (white arrow). Sagittal images of the calf and the 1-L external calibration phantom show the similar approximate sensitivity of the coil.
Skeletal muscle metabolites - 13C NMR spectroscopy.
| Subjects | Glycogen (mM) | Total Creatine (mM) | Glycogen/Total Creatine |
| MD | 192.5±15.1 | 85.6±22.5 | 2.3±0.6 |
| PFKD | 202.1 | 124.2 | 1.6 |
| Controls | 75.7±13.6 | 77.1±8.3 | 1.0±0.3 |
Values are expressed individually or group means ± SD. MD, McArdle disease; PFKD, phosphofructokinase deficiency; mM, millimoles per liter.
Figure 2Correction factors for the glycogen/acetate ratio as a function of the thickness of the fat layer underneath the calibration phantom.
All in vivo data were corrected for the measured thickness of the subcutaneous fat by using interpolated values from this figure. For most subjects this correction was in the order of 4−5%.
Figure 3. Skeletal muscle glycogen (3A) and total creatine concentrations (3B) measured by 13C MRS.
Values are expressed individually or group means ± SD. GSD, glycogen storage diseases; MD, McArdle disease; PFKD, phosphofructokinase deficiency; controls, healthy control subjects; g/kg w. w., grams per kilogram wet weight.