2 research outputs found
Parameterization of metabolite and macromolecule contributions in interrelated MR spectra of human brain using multidimensional modeling.
Macromolecular signals are crucial constituents of short echo-time 1 H MR spectra with potential clinical implications in themselves as well as essential ramifications for the quantification of the usually targeted metabolites. Their parameterization, needed for general fitting models, is difficult because of their unknown composition. Here, a macromolecular signal parameterization together with metabolite signal quantification including relaxation properties is investigated by multidimensional modeling of interrelated 2DJ inversion-recovery (2DJ-IR) datasets. Simultaneous and iterative procedures for defining the macromolecular background (MMBG) as mono-exponentially or generally decaying signals over TE are evaluated. Varying prior knowledge and restrictions in the metabolite evaluation are tested to examine their impact on results and fitting stability for two sets of three-dimensional spectra acquired with metabolite-cycled PRESS from cerebral gray and white matter locations. One dataset was used for model optimization, and also examining the influence of prior knowledge on estimated parameters. The most promising model was applied to a second dataset. It turned out that the mono-exponential decay model appears to be inadequate to represent TE-dependent signal features of the MMBG. TE-adapted MMBG spectra were therefore determined. For a reliable overall quantification of implicated metabolite concentrations and relaxation times, a general fitting model had to be constrained in terms of the number of fitting variables and the allowed parameter space. With such a model in place, fitting precision for metabolite contents and relaxation times was excellent, while fitting accuracy is difficult to judge and bias was likely influenced by the type of fitting constraints enforced. In summary, the parameterization of metabolite and macromolecule contributions in interrelated MR spectra has been examined by using multidimensional modeling on complex 2DJ-IR datasets. A tightly restricted model allows fitting of individual subject data with high fitting precision documented in small Cramér-Rao lower bounds, good repeatability values and a relatively small spread of estimated concentration and relaxation values for a healthy subject cohort
Parameterization of metabolite and macromolecule contributions in interrelated MR spectra of human brain using multidimensional modeling
Macromolecular signals are crucial constituents of short echo-time 1 H MR spectra with potential clinical implications in themselves as well as essential ramifications for the quantification of the usually targeted metabolites. Their parameterization, needed for general fitting models, is difficult because of their unknown composition. Here, a macromolecular signal parameterization together with metabolite signal quantification including relaxation properties is investigated by multidimensional modeling of interrelated 2DJ inversion-recovery (2DJ-IR) datasets. Simultaneous and iterative procedures for defining the macromolecular background (MMBG) as mono-exponentially or generally decaying signals over TE are evaluated. Varying prior knowledge and restrictions in the metabolite evaluation are tested to examine their impact on results and fitting stability for two sets of three-dimensional spectra acquired with metabolite-cycled PRESS from cerebral gray and white matter locations. One dataset was used for model optimization, and also examining the influence of prior knowledge on estimated parameters. The most promising model was applied to a second dataset. It turned out that the mono-exponential decay model appears to be inadequate to represent TE-dependent signal features of the MMBG. TE-adapted MMBG spectra were therefore determined. For a reliable overall quantification of implicated metabolite concentrations and relaxation times, a general fitting model had to be constrained in terms of the number of fitting variables and the allowed parameter space. With such a model in place, fitting precision for metabolite contents and relaxation times was excellent, while fitting accuracy is difficult to judge and bias was likely influenced by the type of fitting constraints enforced. In summary, the parameterization of metabolite and macromolecule contributions in interrelated MR spectra has been examined by using multidimensional modeling on complex 2DJ-IR datasets. A tightly restricted model allows fitting of individual subject data with high fitting precision documented in small Cramér-Rao lower bounds, good repeatability values and a relatively small spread of estimated concentration and relaxation values for a healthy subject cohort