## Abstract Studies have been performed to evaluate the reproducibility of longitudinal acquisitions with short TE spectroscopic magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of human brain. In healthy volunteers, the ratios of __N__‐acetyl‐aspartate (NAA) and choline (Cho) with respect to total creatine (Cr) (c
Test-retest reliability and reproducibility of short-echo-time spectroscopic imaging of human brain at 3T
✍ Scribed by Charles Gasparovic; Edward J. Bedrick; Andrew R. Mayer; Ronald A. Yeo; HongJi Chen; Eswar Damaraju; Vince D. Calhoun; Rex E. Jung
- Book ID
- 102956312
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 630 KB
- Volume
- 66
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
A ^1^H magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging study at 3T and short echo time was conducted to evaluate both the reproducibility, as measured by the interscan coefficient of variation (CV), and test‐retest reliability, as measured by the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), of measurements of glutamate (Glu), combined glutamate and glutamine (Glx), myo‐inositol (mI), N‐acetylaspartate, creatine, and choline in 21 healthy subjects. The effect of partial volume correction on these measures and the relationship of reproducibility and reliability to data quality were also examined. A ^1^H magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging slice was prescribed above the lateral ventricles and single repeat scans were performed within 30 min to minimize physiologic variability. Interscan CVs based on all the voxels varied from 0.05 to 0.07 for N‐acetylaspartate, creatine, and choline to 0.10–0.13 for mI, Glu, and Glx. Findings on the reproducibility of gray and white matter estimates of N‐acetylaspartate, creatine, and choline are consistent with previous studies using longer echo times, with CVs in the range of 0.02–0.04 and ICC in the range of 0.65–0.90. CVs for Glu, Glx, and mI are much lower than reported in previous studies at 1.5T, while white matter mI (CV = 0.04, ICC = 0.93) and gray matter Glx (CV = 0.04, ICC = 0.68) demonstrated both high reproducibility and test‐retest reliability. Magn Reson Med, 2011. © 2011 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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