Literature DB >> 33751687

MR spectroscopic imaging at 3 T and outcomes in surgical epilepsy.

Jullie W Pan1,2, Arun Antony2, Assaf Tal3, Victor Yushmanov1, Joanna Fong2, Mark Richardson4, Claud Schirda1, Anto Bagic2, Oded Gonen5, Hoby P Hetherington1.   

Abstract

For the spectroscopic assessment of brain disorders that require large-volume coverage, the requirements of RF performance and field homogeneity are high. For epilepsy, this is also challenging given the inter-patient variation in location, severity and subtlety of anatomical identification and its tendency to involve the temporal region. We apply a targeted method to examine the utility of large-volume MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) in surgical epilepsy patients, implementing a two-step acquisition, comprised of a 3D acquisition to cover the fronto-parietal regions, and a contiguous parallel two-slice Hadamard-encoded acquisition to cover the temporal-occipital region, both with TR /TE = 2000/40 ms and matched acquisition times. With restricted (static, first/second-order) B0 shimming in their respective regions, the Cramér-Rao lower bounds for creatine from the temporal lobe two-slice Hadamard and frontal-parietal 3D acquisition are 8.1 ± 2.2% and 6.3 ± 1.9% respectively. The datasets are combined to provide a total 60 mm axial coverage over the frontal, parietal and superior temporal to middle temporal-occipital regions. We applied these acquisitions at a nominal 400 mm3 voxel resolution in n = 27 pre-surgical epilepsy patients and n = 20 controls. In controls, 86.6 ± 3.2% voxels with at least 50% tissue (white + gray matter, excluding CSF) survived spectral quality inclusion criteria. Since all patients were clinically followed for at least 1 year after surgery, seizure frequency outcome was available for all. The MRSI measurements of the total fractional metabolic dysfunction (characterized by the Cr/NAA metric) in FreeSurfer MRI gray matter segmented regions, in the patients compared with the controls, exhibited a significant Spearman correlation with post-surgical outcome. This finding suggests that a larger burden of metabolic dysfunction is seen in patients with poorer post-surgical seizure control.
© 2021 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Hadamard; epilepsy; rosette; spectroscopic imaging

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33751687      PMCID: PMC8122073          DOI: 10.1002/nbm.4492

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  NMR Biomed        ISSN: 0952-3480            Impact factor:   4.478


  35 in total

1.  High-resolution imaging using Hadamard encoding.

Authors:  D W Fletcher; J C Haselgrove; L Bolinger
Journal:  Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  1999-12       Impact factor: 2.546

2.  Robust fully automated shimming of the human brain for high-field 1H spectroscopic imaging.

Authors:  Hoby P Hetherington; Wen-Jang Chu; Oded Gonen; Jullie W Pan
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 4.668

3.  ILAE Commission Report. Proposal for a new classification of outcome with respect to epileptic seizures following epilepsy surgery.

Authors:  H G Wieser; W T Blume; D Fish; E Goldensohn; A Hufnagel; D King; M R Sperling; H Lüders; T A Pedley
Journal:  Epilepsia       Date:  2001-02       Impact factor: 5.864

4.  A 32-channel combined RF and B0 shim array for 3T brain imaging.

Authors:  Jason P Stockmann; Thomas Witzel; Boris Keil; Jonathan R Polimeni; Azma Mareyam; Cristen LaPierre; Kawin Setsompop; Lawrence L Wald
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2015-02-17       Impact factor: 4.668

Review 5.  Mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress: a contributing link to acquired epilepsy?

Authors:  Simon Waldbaum; Manisha Patel
Journal:  J Bioenerg Biomembr       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 2.945

6.  A randomized, controlled trial of surgery for temporal-lobe epilepsy.

Authors:  S Wiebe; W T Blume; J P Girvin; M Eliasziw
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2001-08-02       Impact factor: 91.245

7.  Metabolic changes in the normal ageing brain: consistent findings from short and long echo time proton spectroscopy.

Authors:  S Gruber; K Pinker; F Riederer; M Chmelík; A Stadlbauer; M Bittsanský; V Mlynárik; R Frey; W Serles; O Bodamer; E Moser
Journal:  Eur J Radiol       Date:  2007-10-25       Impact factor: 3.528

8.  7T MR spectroscopic imaging in the localization of surgical epilepsy.

Authors:  Jullie W Pan; Robert B Duckrow; Jason Gerrard; Caroline Ong; Lawrence J Hirsch; Stanley R Resor; Yan Zhang; Ognen Petroff; Susan Spencer; Hoby P Hetherington; Dennis D Spencer
Journal:  Epilepsia       Date:  2013-07-29       Impact factor: 5.864

9.  Metabolic and electrophysiological alterations in subtypes of temporal lobe epilepsy: a combined proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging and depth electrodes study.

Authors:  Maxime Guye; Yann Le Fur; Sylviane Confort-Gouny; Jean-Philippe Ranjeva; Fabrice Bartolomei; Jean Régis; Charles A Raybaud; Patrick Chauvel; Patrick J Cozzone
Journal:  Epilepsia       Date:  2002-10       Impact factor: 5.864

10.  The long-term outcomes of epilepsy surgery.

Authors:  Midhun Mohan; Simon Keller; Andrew Nicolson; Shubhabrata Biswas; David Smith; Jibril Osman Farah; Paul Eldridge; Udo Wieshmann
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-05-16       Impact factor: 3.240

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  1 in total

1.  Fast, regional three-dimensional hybrid (1D-Hadamard 2D-rosette) proton MR spectroscopic imaging in the human temporal lobes.

Authors:  Assaf Tal; Tiejun Zhao; Claudiu Schirda; Hoby P Hetherington; Jullie W Pan; Oded Gonen
Journal:  NMR Biomed       Date:  2021-03-23       Impact factor: 4.478

  1 in total

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