| Literature DB >> 30388152 |
Stefanie Lehmann1,2, Nicolas Linder1,3, Ulf Retschlag1, Alexander Schaudinn3, Roland Stange1,3, Nikita Garnov1,3, Arne Dietrich1,4, Andreas Oberbach2,5, Thomas Kahn3, Harald Busse3.
Abstract
Bariatric surgery and other therapeutic options for obese patients are often evaluated by the loss of weight, reduction of comorbidities or improved quality of life. However, little is currently known about potential therapy-related changes in the adipose tissue of obese patients. The aim of this study was therefore to quantify fat fraction (FF) and T1 relaxation time by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery and compare the resulting values with the preoperative ones. Corresponding MRI data were available from 23 patients (16 females and 7 males) that had undergone MRI before (M0) and one month after (M1) bariatric surgery. Patients were 22-59 years old (mean age 44.3 years) and their BMI ranged from 35.7-54.6 kg/m2 (mean BMI 44.6 kg/m2) at M0. Total visceral AT volumes (VVAT-T, in L) were measured by semi-automatic segmentation of axial MRI images acquired between diaphragm and femoral heads. MRI FF and T1 relaxation times were measured in well-defined regions of visceral (VAT) and subcutaneous (SAT) adipose tissue using two custom-made analysis tools. Average BMI values were 45.4 kg/m2 at time point M0 and 42.4 kg/m2 at M1. Corresponding VVAT-T values were 5.94 L and 5.33 L. Intraindividual differences in both BMI and VVAT-T were highly significant (p<0.001). Average relaxation times T1VAT were 303.7 ms at M0 and 316.9 ms at M1 (p<0.001). Corresponding T1SAT times were 283.2 ms and 280.7 ms (p = 0.137). Similarly, FFVAT differences (M0: 85.7%, M1: 83.4%) were significant (p <0.01) whereas FFSAT differences (M0: 86.1, M1: 85.9%) were not significant (p = 0.517). In conclusion, bariatric surgery is apparently not only related to a significant reduction in common parameters of adipose tissue distribution, here BMI and total visceral fat volume, but also significant changes in T1 relaxation time and fat fraction of visceral adipose tissue. Such quantitative MRI measures may potentially serve as independent biomarkers for longitudinal and cross-sectional measurements in obese patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30388152 PMCID: PMC6214540 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0206735
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Screenshot of custom-made software tool for the quantification of T1 relaxation times in selected regions of interest.
Display shows presurgical axial T1 map of an obese, 31-year-old female patient with a BMI of 41.1 kg/m2. T1 values were determined in VAT (174 pixels) and SAT ROI (237 pixels) by fitting mean signal intensities (SI) in arbitrary units (a.u.) of single-shot fast spin-echo sequence with inversion recovery preparation at different inversion times TI to model function [17].
Fig 2Distribution of individual T1 times for VAT ROI from Fig 1.
Corresponding coefficient of variation CVT1 is taken as a quantitative estimate for the reliability of ROI-based T1 measurement, here 2.1%.
Body mass index (BMI) and MRI-derived parameters of obese patients before (M0) and one month after bariatric surgery (M1).
| Measure | Month 0 [M0] | Month 1 [M1] |
|---|---|---|
| 45.4 ± 5.7 | 42.4 ± 5.9 (–6.8 %) | |
| 5.94 ± 2.24 | 5.33 ± 2.21 (–10.9 %) | |
| 303.7 ± 9.7 | 316.9 ± 14.1 (+4.4 %) | |
| 283.2 ± 8.2 | 280.7 ± 10.4 (–0.9 %) | |
| 85.7 ± 2.8 | 83.4 ± 2.9 (–2.6 %) | |
| 86.1 ± 1.8 | 85.9 ± 2.0 (–0.2 %) |
VVAT-T, total visceral VAT volume; FF, fat fraction; T1, T1 relaxation time
p≥0.05
*, p<0.05
**, p<0.01 and
***, p<0.001.
Fig 3Plot of relative changes in adipose tissue parameters for 23 obese patients one month after bariatric surgery.
Symbols show mean percent changes in BMI, total abdominal VAT volume (VVAT-T), regional fat fraction in visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissue (FFVAT and FFSAT), and corresponding T1 relaxation times (T1VAT and T1SAT) one month after (M1) relative to before bariatric surgery (M0). Error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals. Asterisks denote level of significance: * (p<0.05), ** (p<0.01), *** (p<0.001). Some symbols have been slightly offset to improve readability.
Fig 4Intra-individual T1 relaxation times (at 1.5 T) in visceral adipose tissue (VAT) of 23 obese patients one month after (M1) relative to before bariatric surgery (M0).
Black circles indicate patients with increased T1 time (n+ = 18) and gray circles those with either reduced (n– = 4) or same T1 time (n0 = 1). Overall increase was highly significant (p<0.01).