16:30 |
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Introduction
Robert G. Weiss |
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16:42 |
166. |
Reduced Myocardial Creatine Kinase Reaction Rates in
Human Heart Failure: First Measurements at 3T
Michael Schär1,2,
AbdElmonem M. El-Sharkawy1, Paul A. Bottomley1,3,
Robert G. Weiss1,3
1Russel
H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological
Science, The Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States; 2Philips
Healthcare, Cleveland, OH, United States; 3Division
of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, The Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United
States
A triple repetition time
saturation transfer method is applied to measure
pseudo-first-order rate-constant kf of
the creatine kinase reaction in the hearts of 16
patients with heart failure and 9 healthy subjects for
the first time at 3T. In heart failure, kf
is reduced to 65% of the normal value, in agreement with
prior reports at 1.5T using a different technique.
Furthermore, the intrinsic 31P T1 of
phosphocreatine did not differ significantly between
these subjects, possibly permitting elimination of one
protocol step. The resulting two repetition time
saturation transfer method, TwiST, yields the same
cardiac kf measures in less time.
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16:54 |
167. |
In Vivo
Creatine Kinase Kinetics in Diabetic Heart: Relationship to
Cardiac Work
Adil Bashir1,
Robert J. Gropler1
1Mallinckrodt
Institute of Radiology, Washington University in St. Louis,
St. Louis, MO, United States
In vivo measurements of
creatine kinase kinetics provide a better measure of cardiac
energy metabolism than PCr to ATP ratio. Using optimized
magnetization transfer approach we have measured energy
production in rat hearts at two levels of cardiac
performance and found it to be closely coupled with work
load in normal rat hearts. In diabetic hearts the PCr
concentration was lower at rest and the energy production
for cardiac work was maintained by higher CK rate constant.
When cardiac work was increased the CK flux in diabetic
animals did not increase in proportion to the work
indicating impaired energy production. |
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17:06 |
168. |
Hyperpolarised [2-13C]Pyruvate Uniquely Reveals
the Role of Acetylcarnitine as a Mitochondrial Substrate
Buffer in the Heart
Marie Allen
Schroeder1, Helen J. Atherton1, Philip
Lee2, Michael S. Dodd1, Lowri E.
Cochlin1, Kieran E. Clarke1, George K.
Radda1,2, Damian J. Tyler1
1Physiology,
Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford, Oxford,
Oxfordshire, United Kingdom; 2Biomedical Sciences
Institute, Singapore Bioimaging Consortium, Singapore,
Singapore
Mitochondrial acetylcarnitine
may be involved in balancing the glucose-fatty acid cycle in
the heart. Here, we used hyperpolarised [2-13C]pyruvate
with magnetic resonance spectroscopy to monitor the
incorporation of acetyl-CoA formed by pyruvate dehydrogenase
into the acetylcarnitine pool, and the metabolites of the
Krebs cycle, in real-time and in vivo. Our results
demonstrated that most pyruvate-derived acetyl-CoA entering
the Krebs cycle does not immediately condense with
oxaloacetate, but is first converted to acetylcarnitine.
Examination of acetylcarnitine production from pyruvate-derived
acetyl-CoA in vivo revealed that acetylcarnitine
provides a rapidly mobilised mitochondrial buffer for
oxidative substrate and may be fundamental in maintaining
high, constant ATP levels in the heart. |
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17:18 |
169. |
Quantification of Myocardial Triglycerides: Ex-Vivo and
In-Vivo Evaluations by Two-Point Water-Fat Imaging and 1H
Spectroscopy
Chia-Ying
Liu1, Alban Redheuil1, Ronald
Ouwerkerk2, Charles Steenbergen3,
Shenghan Lai4, Joao Lima1, David
Bluemke5
1Department
of Radiology, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD, United
States; 2The National Institute of Diabetes and
Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of
Health, Bethesda, MD, United States; 3Department
of Pathology, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD,
United States; 4Department of Epidemiology, Johns
Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health, Baltimore, MD,
United States; 5Radiology and Imaging Sciences,
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States
The concept of fat contained
within the myocardium, has recently received attention
because of its potential role in diabetic myocardial
disease, obesity, and HIV infected individuals. Measurements
of myocardial triglycerides in humans have been accessed
using proton MR spectroscopy (1H MRS). We studied the
accuracy of the dual-echo Dixon MRI in quantifying the fatty
content of the myocardium in autopsies and patients. 1H MRS
as an independent method was also applied for comparison. |
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17:30 |
170. |
Human
Cardiac Creatine Kinase Flux Measurement at 3T Using 31P
Magnetization Transfer MRS
Adil Bashir1,
Robert J. Gropler1
1Mallinckrodt
Institute of Radiology, Washington University in St. Louis,
St. Louis, MO, United States
31P magnetization transfer
MRS can measure energy turnover in the myocardium through
the creatine kinase (CK) reaction. The in vivo application
of this technique has been lagging especially for human
studies. We have developed an optimized strategy to measure
adenosine diphosphate (ATP) production in human heart via CK
system. This is the first demonstration of the technique for
human studies at 3T. The high field magnet provides
reduction in total experiment time and improved spectral
resolution over 1.5T magnet. Our results also demonstrate
that the energy production in diabetic heart is impaired.
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17:42 |
171. |
Cardiac
Spectroscopy in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) Correlates
with Autonomic Abnormalities on Standing and Stratifies
Oxidative Function in Skeletal Muscle
- not available
Kieren Grant
Hollingsworth1, David Emerys Jones2,
Roy Taylor1, Julia Lindsay Newton3,
Andrew Mark Blamire1
1Newcastle Magnetic
Resonance Centre, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne,
Tyne and Wear, United Kingdom; 2Institute of
Cellular Medicine, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon
Tyne, Tyne and Wear, United Kingdom; 3Institute
for Ageing and Health, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon
Tyne, Tyne and Wear, United Kingdom
Studies of muscle metabolism
in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) have often had
contradictory results and suggested the presence of mixed
phenotypes. Recent evidence has suggested that cardiac
output is adversely affected in CFS. 12 female CFS/ME
patients and 8 controls were recruited. Cardiac phosphorus
spectroscopy, muscle exercise phosphorus spectroscopy and
impedance cardiography were acquired. Cardiac PCr/ATP ratio
was related to changes in cardiac index on standing and
reduced PCr/ATP ratio was found to correlate with impaired
oxidative function (half-times for PCr and ADP recovery).
Cardiac spectroscopy was found to be useful in stratifying
oxidative function in CFS. |
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17:54 |
172. |
In
Vivo 17O MRS Imaging for Assessing Myocardial
Oxygen Metabolism in Rat Heart at 9.4T
- not available
Xiao-Hong Zhu1,
Yi Zhang1, Wei Chen1
1Center for Magnetic
Resonance Research, Department of Radiology, Minneapolis,
MN, United States
Heart, similar to brain, is a
highly aerobic organ which consumes a large portion of
oxygen utilized by the entire body. The myocardial oxygen
metabolism provides essential energy for performing myocyte
contraction/relaxation and maintaining normal cardiac
functions. It is, thus, important to develop an in vivo
MR imaging approach capable of noninvasively imaging the
myocardial oxygen metabolic rate (MVO2).
Recently, high-field in vivo 17O MRS
imaging (MRSI) has been applied to imaging the rat brain
oxygen metabolism. In this study, we exploit the feasibility
of the 17O approach for imaging rat MVO2
at 9.4T with a brief inhalation of 17O-labeled
oxygen gas under basal and workload conditions. |
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18:06 |
173. |
Myocardial Fat Content: Single Breath-Hold 1H-MR
Spectroscopy at 3 T
Belen Rial1,
Stefan Neubauer1, Matthew D. Robson1,
Jurgen E. Schneider1
1Cardiovascular
Medicine, Oxford University, Oxford, Oxfordshire, United
Kingdom
Proton MR Spectroscopy
provides a window into myocardial metabolism. Cardiac and
respiratory motion still degrades the sensitivity of the
method and hence metabolite detection. Some techniques for
reducing this problem have recently emerged, however a
compromise between feasible scan duration and easy
implementation of these techniques in a clinical scanner has
not been reached yet. In this study we demonstrate feasible
single breath-hold 1H-MR spectroscopy in the
human heart at 3 T, obtaining one unsuppressed-water
spectrum and three metabolite spectra, which allowed
reliable quantification of fat as percentage of water
content in the myocardium of healthy volunteers. |
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18:18 |
174. |
Myocardial Lipids and Myocardial Function in Insulin
Resistant Population
Martin Krssak1,2,
Yvonne Winhofer2, Christian Göbl2,
Martin Bischof2, Gert Reiter3,
Alexandra Kautzky-Willer2, Anton Luger2,
Michael Krebs2, Christian Anderwald2
1Radiology, Medical
University of Vienna, Wien, Austria; 2Internal
Medicine III, Medical University of Vienna, Wien, Austria;
3Siemens Healthcare Austria, Graz, Austria
Myocardial lipid accumulation
and myocardial function were measured by 1H MR spectroscopy
and imaging in a group of non-diabetic insulin sensitive and
metabolically matched non-diabetic insulin resistant women.
No differences were found between these two groups, but
hampered myocardial function and increased myocardial lipid
accumulation was found in a group patients with type 2
diabetic mellitus, who served as a negative controls. Our
results suggest that increased myocardial lipid content and
restricted myocardial capacity are not linked to insulin
resistance per se, but might develop after the manifestation
of type-2 diabetes. |
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