Oded Gonen

Oded Gonen
  • Ph.D
  • Professor at NYU Langone Medical Center

About

195
Publications
11,418
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
5,970
Citations
Current institution
NYU Langone Medical Center
Current position
  • Professor

Publications

Publications (195)
Article
Full-text available
Research supports an association between diet and health, and emerging evidence suggests that diet is associated with neuropsychiatric symptoms. However, no human study has examined an anti-inflammatory diet across rigorously defined psychiatric diagnoses and its associations with symptom severity and cognition. As inflammation is implicated in men...
Article
Although increasing evidence links microbial dysbiosis with the risk for psychiatric symptoms through the microbiome-gut-brain axis (MGBA), the specific mechanisms remain poorly characterized. In a diagnostically heterogeneous group of treated psychiatric cases and nonpsychiatric controls, we characterized the gut and oral microbiome, plasma cytoki...
Article
Background and hypothesis: Microvascular and inflammatory mechanisms have been hypothesized to be involved in the pathophysiology of psychotic spectrum disorders (PSDs). However, data evaluating these hypotheses remain limited. Study design: We applied a three-compartment intravoxel incoherent motion free water imaging (IVIM-FWI) technique that...
Article
Purpose: Hippocampal dysfunction plays a key role in the pathology of psychosis. Given hippocampal sensitivity to changes in cerebral perfusion, decreased baroreflex function could contribute to psychosis pathogenesis. This study had two aims: (1) To compare baroreflex sensitivity in participants with psychosis to two control groups: participants...
Article
We developed a “gut-brain-axis questionnaire” (GBAQ) to obtain standardized person-specific “review of systems” data for microbiome-gut-brain-axis studies. Individual items were compared to PANSS symptom measures using dimensional, transdiagnostic and traditional categorical approaches. Method : Forty psychotic participants, independent of diagnos...
Article
Background and purpose: Accurate differentiation of paragangliomas and schwannomas in the jugular foramen has important clinical implications because treatment strategies may vary but differentiation is not always straightforward with conventional imaging. Our aim was to evaluate the accuracy of both qualitative and quantitative metrics derived fr...
Article
1H‐MRSI is commonly performed with gradient phase encoding, due to its simplicity and minimal radio frequency (RF) heating (specific absorption rate). Its two well‐known main problems—(i) “voxel bleed” due to the intrinsic point‐spread function, and (ii) chemical shift displacement error (CSDE) when slice‐selective RF pulses are used, which worsens...
Article
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...
Article
We characterize the whole-brain N-acetyl-aspartate (WBNAA) and brain tissue fractions across the adult lifespan and test the hypothesis that, despite age-related atrophy, neuronal integrity (reflected by WBNAA) is preserved in normal aging. Two-hundred-and-seven participants: 133 cognitively intact older adults (73.6 ± 7.4 mean ± standard deviation...
Article
Background and purpose: Previous hippocampal proton MR spectroscopic imaging distinguished patients with schizophrenia from controls by elevated Cr levels and significantly more variable NAA and Cho concentrations. This goal of this study was to ascertain whether this metabolic variability is associated with clinical features of the syndrome, poss...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Rare variants in the TRIO gene are associated with schizophrenia and autism spectrum disorders (ASD), which are commonly comorbid. ASD may define a specific schizophrenia subtype. This study examined person-specific hippocampal metabolite concentrations for 4 schizophrenia cases harboring rare variants in TRIO or its interaction partner...
Article
Background 3D brain proton MR spectroscopic imaging (¹H MRSI) facilitates simultaneous metabolic profiling of multiple loci, at higher, sub‐1 cm³, spatial resolution than single‐voxel ¹H MRS with the ability to separate tissue‐type partial volume contribution(s). Purpose To determine if: 1) white matter (WM) damage in mild traumatic brain injury (...
Article
Objective: To test the hypothesis that localization-related epilepsy is associated with widespread neuronal dysfunction beyond the ictal focus, reflected by a decrease in patients' global concentration of their proton MR spectroscopy (1H-MRS) observed marker, N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA). Methods: Thirteen patients with localization-related epilepsy...
Poster
Full-text available
Research Objectives: Review how Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy reveals white matter injury with increased sensitivity to diffuse axonal injury in mTBI Assess whether associations between MRS, cognitive profiles and patient reports can explain variable symptom reports in mTBI Design: Twenty nine consecutive, prospectively recruited patients with mT...
Article
Objectives: The aim of this study was to compare testicular metabolite concentrations between fertile control subjects and infertile men. Materials and methods: Single voxel proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (H-MRS) was performed in the testes with and without water suppression at 3 T in 9 fertile control subjects and 9 infertile patients (...
Article
Total N-acetyl-aspartate + N-acetyl-aspartate-glutamate (NAA), total creatine (Cr) and total choline (Cho) proton MRS ((1) H-MRS) signals are often used as surrogate markers in diffuse neurological pathologies, but spatial coverage of this methodology is limited to 1%-65% of the brain. Here we wish to demonstrate that non-localized, whole-head (WH)...
Article
Although MRI assessment of white matter lesions is essential for the clinical management of multiple sclerosis, the processes leading to the formation of lesions and underlying their subsequent MRI appearance are incompletely understood. We used proton MR spectroscopy to study the evolution of N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA), creatine (Cr), choline (Cho),...
Article
Background and purpose: Preoperative localization of the pituitary gland with imaging in patients with macroadenomas has been inadequately explored. The pituitary gland enhancing more avidly than a macroadenoma has been described in the literature. Taking advantage of this differential enhancement pattern, our aim was to evaluate the role of high-...
Article
Purpose To assess the diagnostic performance of the callosal angle (CA) and Evans index (EI) measures and to determine their role versus automated volumetric methods in clinical radiology. Materials and Methods Magnetic resonance (MR) examinations performed before surgery (within 1-5 months of the MR examination) in 36 shunt-responsive patients wit...
Article
Background and purpose: To assess the sensitivity of non-localized, whole-head (1)H-MRS to an individual's serial changes in total-brain NAA, Glx, Cr and Cho concentrations - metabolite metrics often used as surrogate markers in neurological pathologies. Materials and methods: In this prospective study, four back-to-back (single imaging session)...
Article
Background and purpose: Schizophrenia is well-known to be associated with hippocampal structural abnormalities. We used (1)H-MR spectroscopy to test the hypothesis that these abnormalities are accompanied by NAA deficits, reflecting neuronal dysfunction, in patients compared with healthy controls. Materials and methods: Nineteen patients with sc...
Article
Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), also commonly referred to as concussion, affects millions of Americans annually. Although computed tomography is the first-line imaging technique for all traumatic brain injury, it is incapable of providing long-term prognostic information in mTBI. In the past decade, the amount of research related to magnetic re...
Chapter
Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (1H MRSI) is a noninvasive, nondestructive MR (magnetic resonance) modality. It is often used in the human brain in conjunction with clinical and quantitative MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), to augment MRI's much higher sensitivity with the better specificity of MRS (magnetic resonance spectroscopy)...
Article
Full-text available
Although NAA is often used as a marker of neuronal health and integrity in neurologic disorders, its normal response to physiologic challenge is not well-established and its changes are almost always attributed exclusively to brain pathology. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that the neuronal cell marker NAA, often used to asses...
Article
Diffusion MRI combined with biophysical modeling allows for the description of a white matter (WM) fiber bundle in terms of compartment specific white matter tract integrity (WMTI) metrics, which include intra-axonal diffusivity (Daxon), extra-axonal axial diffusivity (De||), extra-axonal radial diffusivity (De┴), axonal water fraction (AWF), and t...
Article
Full-text available
The pituitary gland is located outside of the blood-brain barrier. Dynamic T1 weighted contrast enhanced sequence is considered to be the gold standard to evaluate this region. However, it does not allow assessment of intrinsic permeability properties of the gland. Our aim was to demonstrate the utility of radial volumetric interpolated brain exami...
Article
Working memory (Work-Mem), the capacity to hold and manipulate information, activates the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), especially its caudal subregion. Impaired Work-Mem and structural and functional abnormalities of the ACC are reported in schizophrenia. This study aims to elucidate the pathogenesis of Work-Mem dysfunction in schizophrenia by...
Article
As ~40% of HIV-infected individuals experience neurocognitive decline, we investigated whether proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging ((1) H-MRSI) detects early metabolic abnormalities in the cerebral cortex of a simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-infected rhesus monkey model of neuroAIDS. The brains of five rhesus monkeys before and 4 or...
Article
To design a proton MR spectroscopy ((1) H-MRS) localization sequence that combines the signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) benefits of point resolved spectroscopy (PRESS) with the high pulse bandwidths, low chemical shift displacements (CSD), low specific absorption rates (SAR), short echo times (TE), and superior radiofrequency transmit field (B1+ ) immun...
Article
Full-text available
Background Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is an intermediary state on the way to Alzheimer's disease (AD). Little is known about whole brain concentration of the neuronal marker, N-acetylaspartate (NAA) in MCI patients. Objective To test the hypothesis that since MCI and AD are both neurodegenerative, quantification of the NAA in their whole brai...
Article
Concentration of the neuronal marker, N-acetylaspartate (NAA), a quantitative metric for the health and density of neurons, is currently obtained by integration of the manually defined peak in whole-head proton (1H)-MRS. Our goal was to develop a full spectral modeling approach for the automatic estimation of the whole-brain NAA concentration (WBNA...
Article
To reduce the specific-absorption-rate (SAR) and chemical shift displacement (CSD) of three-dimensional (3D) Hadamard spectroscopic imaging (HSI) and maintain its point spread function (PSF) benefits. A 3D hybrid of 2D longitudinal, 1D transverse HSI (L-HSI, T-HSI) sequence is introduced and demonstrated in a phantom and the human brain at 3 Tesla...
Article
Full-text available
Evidence suggests that normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is underdiagnosed in day to day radiologic practice, and differentiating NPH from cerebral atrophy due to other neurodegenerative diseases and normal aging remains a challenge. To better characterize NPH, we test the hypothesis that a prediction model based on automated MRI brain tissue seg...
Article
To obtain quantitative neurometabolite measurements, specifically myoinositol (mI) and glutamate plus glutamine (Glx), markers of glial and neuronal excitation, in deep gray matter structures after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((1)H-MRS) and to compare these measurements against normal healthy cont...
Article
As ∼40% of persons with HIV also suffer neurocognitive decline, we sought to assess metabolic dysfunction in the brains of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-infected rhesus macaques, an advanced animal model, in structures involved in cognitive function. We test the hypothesis that SIV-infection produces proton-magnetic resonance spectroscopic im...
Article
Purpose: To analyze the effect of B0 field drift on multivoxel MR spectroscopic imaging and to propose an approach for its correction. Theory and methods: It is shown, both theoretically and in a phantom, that for ∼30 min acquisitions a linear B0 drift (∼0.1 ppm/h) will cause localization errors that can reach several voxels (centimeters) in the...
Article
Full-text available
To examine whether clinically benign multiple sclerosis patients (BMS) show similar losses of their global N-acetylaspartate (NAA) neuronal marker relative to more clinically disabled patients of similar disease duration. The whole-brain NAA concentration (WBNAA) was acquired with whole-head non-localizing proton MR spectroscopy. Fractional brain p...
Article
A non-spin-echo multivoxel proton MR localization method based on three-dimensional transverse Hadamard spectroscopic imaging is introduced and demonstrated in a phantom and the human brain. Spatial encoding is achieved with three selective 90° radiofrequency pulses along perpendicular axes: The first two create a longitudinal ±M(Z) Hadamard order...
Article
We propose and demonstrate a full 3D longitudinal Hadamard spectroscopic imaging scheme for obtaining chemical shift maps, using adiabatic inversion pulses to encode the spins' positions. The approach offers several advantages over conventional Fourier-based encoding methods, including a localized point spread function; no aliasing, allowing for vo...
Article
To test the hypotheses that global decreased neuro-axonal integrity reflected by decreased N-acetylaspartate (NAA) and increased glial activation reflected by an elevation in its marker, the myo-inositol (mI), present in a CD8-depleted rhesus macaque model of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders. To this end, we performed quantitative MRI and 16...
Article
Since approximately 5-10% of the ~50,000 tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) patients in the US are "MRI-negative," our goal was to test the hypothesis that they nevertheless exhibit metabolic abnormalities. To test this, we used proton MR spectroscopy to obtain and compare gray and white matter (GM and WM) levels of the neuronal marker, N-acetylaspar...
Article
Full-text available
There are no established biomarkers for mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), in part because post-concussive symptoms (PCS) are subjective and conventional imaging is typically unremarkable. To test whether diffuse axonal abnormalities quantified with three-dimensional (3D) proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (1H-MRSI) correlated with pa...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction: Compared to healthy controls (HCs), individuals with multiple sclerosis (MS) show aberrant brain activation patterns during performance of certain tasks. Such patterns of activity have been interpreted as restructuring of functional connections, i.e. the brain’s ability to change neural networks in response to pathology. However, the...
Article
Since the brain's gray matter (GM) and white matter (WM) metabolite concentrations differ, their partial volumes can vary the voxel's (1) H MR spectroscopy ((1) H-MRS) signal, reducing sensitivity to changes. While single-voxel (1) H-MRS cannot differentiate between WM and GM signals, partial volume correction is feasible by MR spectroscopic imagin...
Conference Paper
PURPOSE NPH is increasingly recognized as a treatable cause of motor deficits, cognitive impairment and urinary incontinence. These signs and symptoms may resolve after ventricular shunt surgery. However, little is known about the changes in ventricular volume after shunting and the significance of such changes. Patients with clinical improvement m...
Article
Objective: To characterize and follow the diffuse gray and white matter (GM/WM) metabolic abnormalities in early relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging ((1)H-MRSI). Methods: Eighteen recently diagnosed, mildly disabled patients (mean baseline time from diagnosis 32 months, mean Expanded Disab...
Article
N-acetylaspartate (NAA) is an index of neuronal integrity. We hypothesized that in healthy subjects its whole brain concentration (WBNAA) may be related to formal educational attainment, a common proxy for cognitive reserve. To test this hypothesis, 97 middle aged to elderly subjects (51-89 years old, 38% women) underwent brain magnetic resonance i...
Article
Since mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) often leads to neurological symptoms even without clinical MRI findings, our goal was to test whether diffuse axonal injury is quantifiable with multivoxel proton MR spectroscopic imaging ((1)H-MRSI). T1- and T2-weighted MRI images and three-dimensional (1)H-MRSI (480 voxels over 360 cm(3), about 30 % of the...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction: An estimated 40 million Americans are currently 65 years of age or older, with that number expected to grow to 70 million by 2030 (1). Since several neurological conditions, especially Alzheimer's Disease (AD) and the broad spectrum of ischemic disorders, afflict the elderly, the burden of these diseases to healthcare delivery will so...
Article
To test the hypotheses that 1) patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RR-MS) exhibit a quantifiable decline in their whole-brain concentration of the neural marker N-acetyl-L-aspartate (WBNAA), that is 2) more sensitive than clinical changes and 3) may provide a practical outcome measure for proof-of-concept and larger phase III clin...
Article
We hypothesize that normal aging implies neuronal durability, reflected by age-independent concentrations of their marker--the amino acid derivative N-acetylaspartate (NAA). To test this, we obtained the whole-brain and whole-head N-acetylaspartate concentrations (WBNAA and WHNAA) with proton magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy; and the fractional...
Article
N-acetylaspartate (NAA) is an index of neuronal integrity. We hypothesized that in healthy subjects its whole brain concentration (WBNAA) may be related to formal educational attainment, a common proxy for cognitive reserve. To test this hypothesis, 97 middle aged to elderly subjects (51-89 years old, 38% women) underwent brain magnetic resonance i...
Article
The longitudinal repeatability of proton MR spectroscopy ((1) H-MRS) in the healthy human brain at high fields over long periods is not established. Therefore, we assessed the inter- and intra-subject repeatability of (1) H-MRS in an approach suited for diffuse pathologies in 10 individuals, at 3T, annually for 3 years. Spectra from 480 voxels over...
Article
Full-text available
Background: The ability to predict the course of multiple sclerosis (MS) is highly desirable but lacking. Objective: To test whether the MS Severity Scale (MSSS) and global neuronal viability, assessed through the quantification of the whole-brain N-acetylaspartate concentration (WBNAA), concur or complement the assessment of individual patients’ d...
Article
Full-text available
To test the hypothesis that anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) subregions in patients with schizophrenia are metabolically different from those in healthy control subjects. This institutional review board-approved study was HIPAA compliant, and all participants provided written informed consent. Twenty-two patients with schizophrenia (13 male, nine fe...
Article
Non-human primates are often used as preclinical model systems for (mostly diffuse or multi-focal) neurological disorders and their experimental treatment. Due to cost considerations, such studies frequently utilize non-destructive imaging modalities, MRI and proton MR spectroscopy ((1) H MRS). Cost may explain why the inter- and intra-animal repro...
Article
Full-text available
Although NAA is often used as a marker of neural integrity and health in different neurologic disorders, the temporal behavior of WBNAA is not well characterized. Our goal therefore was to establish its normal variations in a cohort of healthy adults over typical clinical trial periods. Baseline amount of brain NAA, Q(NAA), was obtained with nonloc...
Article
Full-text available
Neuro-axonal damage is a well known sequelae of MS pathogeneses. Consequently, our aim was to test whether the ∼20% of patients with MS exhibiting a clinically benign disease course also have minimal neural dysfunction as reflected by the global concentration of their MR imaging marker NAA. Q(NAA) was obtained with nonlocalizing whole-head (1)H-MR...
Article
The accuracy of metabolic quantification in MR spectroscopy is limited by the unknown radiofrequency field and T(1). To address both issues in proton ((1)H) MR spectroscopy, we obtained radiofrequency field-corrected T(1) maps of N-acetylaspartate, choline, and creatine in five healthy rhesus macaques at 3 T. For efficient use of the 4 hour experim...
Article
Full-text available
Purpose: To establish an imaging approach to visualize the 100-microm-thick hippocampal neuron-generating dentate granule cell layer (DGCL) consistently within a clinically feasible magnetic resonance (MR) imaging duration and to assess its sensitivity by quantifying the likelihood that it will be detected in healthy young adults. Materials and m...
Article
Full-text available
Purpose: To test the hypothesis that T2 signals in lesions and normal-appearing tissue are sufficiently similar that signal variations represent true variations in metabolite concentration. Materials and methods: The T2 distributions of N-acetylaspartate (NAA), creatine (Cr), and choline (Cho) at 3.0 T were mapped in the brain of 10 relapsing-re...
Article
The structure and metabolism of the rhesus macaque brain, an advanced model for neurologic diseases and their treatment response, is often studied noninvasively with MRI and (1)H-MR spectroscopy. Due to the shorter transverse relaxation time (T(2)) at the higher magnetic fields these studies favor, the echo times used in (1)H-MR spectroscopy subjec...
Article
Cytokine induction of the enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) has been implicated in the development of major depressive disorder (MDD). IDO metabolizes tryptophan (TRP) into kynurenine (KYN), thereby decreasing TRP availability to the brain. KYN is further metabolized into several neurotoxins. The aims of this pilot were to examine possible r...
Article
Full-text available
To test the hypothesis that diffuse abnormalities precede axonal damage and atrophy in the MRI normal-appearing tissue of relapsing-remitting (RR) multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, and that these processes continue during clinical remission. Twenty-one recently diagnosed mildly disabled (mean disease duration 2.3 years, mean Expanded Disability Sta...
Article
Localized tissue transverse relaxation time (T(2)) is obtained by fitting a decaying exponential to the signals from several spin-echo experiments at different echo times (TE). Unfortunately, time constraints in magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) often mandate in vivo acquisition schemes at short repetition times (TR), that is, comparable with t...
Article
Full-text available
The aim of this study was to assess quantitatively structural changes in myelin content occurring during demyelination and remyelination by magnetization transfer imaging (MTI). In a reversible model of demyelination with no axonal loss, mice intoxicated by cuprizone were studied by MTI in vivo at 9.4 T. MRI data were compared to histopathological...
Article
Although recent studies indicate that use of a single global transverse relaxation time, T(2), per metabolite is sufficient for better than +/-10% quantification precision at intermediate and short echo-time spectroscopy in young adults, the age-dependence of this finding is unknown. Consequently, the age effect on regional brain choline (Cho), cre...
Article
While the inherent low sensitivity of in vivo MR spectroscopy motivated a trend towards higher magnetic fields, B(0), it has since become apparent that this increase does not seem to translate into the anticipated improvement in spectral resolution. This is attributed to the decrease of the transverse relaxation time, T(2)*, in vivo due to macro- a...
Article
Full-text available
To quantify proton magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy-detectable metabolite concentrations along anteroposterior axis of hippocampus in healthy young and elderly subjects. Young (three women, three men; age range, 25-35 years) and elderly (four women, two men; age range, 68-72 years) groups underwent MR imaging and proton MR spectroscopic imaging...
Article
Although Fourier gradient phase-encoding and Hadamard radio-frequency encoding are two established spatial MR localization techniques, the absence of voxel-shift and interpolation postprocessing algorithms for the latter has always placed it at a discouraging disadvantage. This article presents a method for voxel-shift and interpolation of Hadamard...
Article
Fast, high-resolution, longitudinal relaxation time (T1) mapping is invaluable in clinical and research applications. It has been shown that two spoiled gradient recalled echo (SPGR) images acquired in steady state with variable flip angles is an attractive alternative to the multi-image sets previously acquired with inversion or saturation recover...
Article
Full-text available
Despite the prominent peak of N-acetylaspartate (NAA) in proton MR spectroscopy ((1)H-MR spectroscopy) of the adult brain and its almost exclusive presence in neuronal cells, the total amount of NAA, regarded as their marker, is difficult to obtain due to signal contamination from the skull lipids. This article compares the performance of 2 methods...
Article
Since the amino acid derivative N-acetylaspartate (NAA) is almost exclusive to neuronal cells in the adult mammalian brain and its concentration has shown local (or global) abnormalities in most focal (or diffuse) neurological diseases, it is considered a specific neuronal marker. Yet despite its biological and clinical prominence, the relative NAA...
Article
Glutamate (Glu) is associated with excitotoxic cell damage. Memantine modulates the glutamate induced excitotoxicity in Alzheimer's disease (AD). No information is available as to the influence of memantine on in vivo brain glutamate levels. Hippocampal Glu levels were measured in cognitively impaired and normal individuals (n=10) before and after...
Article
Although the rhesus macaque brain is an excellent model system for the study of neurological diseases and their responses to treatment, its small size requires much higher spatial resolution, motivating use of ultra-high-field (B(0)) imagers. Their weaker radio-frequency fields, however, dictate longer pulses; hence longer TE localization sequences...
Article
Estimating the relaxation constant of an exponentially decaying signal from experimental MR data is fundamental in diffusion tensor imaging, fractional anisotropy mapping, measurements of transverse relaxation rates and contrast agent uptake. The precision of such measurements depends on the choice of acquisition parameters made at the design stage...
Article
Due to the overall similarity of their brains' structure and physiology to its human counterpart, nonhuman primates provide excellent model systems for the pathogenesis of neurological diseases and their response to treatments. Its much smaller size, 80 versus 1250 cm(3), however, requires proportionally higher spatial resolution to study, nondestr...
Article
Full-text available
Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((1)H-MRS) has been increasingly used to examine striatal neurochemistry in adult major depressive disorder. This study extends the use of this modality to pediatric major depression to test the hypothesis that adolescents with major depression have elevated concentrations of striatal choline and creatine and...
Article
Cardiac MRI at 3T provides a means to increase the contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) for first-pass perfusion MRI. However, both the static magnetic field (B(0)) and radio frequency (RF) field (B(1)) variations within the heart are comparatively higher at 3T than at 1.5T. The increased field variations can degrade the performance of a single rectangula...
Article
Full-text available
Proton MR spectroscopy (1H-MR spectroscopy) is a quantitative MR imaging technique often used to complement the sensitivity of conventional MR imaging with specific metabolic information. A key metabolite is the amino acid derivative N-acetylaspartate (NAA), which is almost exclusive to neurons and their processes and is, therefore, an accepted mar...
Article
Full-text available
Although the concentration of N-acetylaspartate (NAA) is often used as a neuronal integrity marker, its normal temporal variations are not well documented. To assess them over the 1-2 year periods of typical clinical trials, the whole-brain NAA concentration was measured longitudinally, over 4 years, in a cohort of healthy young adults. No signific...
Article
Although most mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) patients suffer any of several post-concussion symptoms suggestive of thalamic involvement, they rarely present with any MRI-visible pathology. The aim here, therefore, is to characterize their thalamic metabolite levels with proton MR spectroscopy (1H-MRS) compared with healthy controls. T1-weighted...
Article
Proton MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) at higher magnetic fields (B(0)) suffers metabolite localization errors from different chemical-shift displacements (CSDs) if spatially-selective excitation is used. This phenomenon is exacerbated by the decreasing radiofrequency (RF) field strength, B(1), at higher B(0)s, precluding its suppression with stron...
Article
The transverse relaxation times, T(2), of N-acetylaspartate (NAA), total choline (Cho), and creatine (Cr) obtained at 3T in several human brain regions of eight healthy volunteers are reported. They were obtained simultaneously in 320 voxels with three-dimensional (3D) proton MR spectroscopy ((1)H-MRS) at 1 cm(3) spatial resolution. A two-point pro...
Article
Full-text available
More than 85% of brain traumas are classified as "mild"; MR imaging findings are minimal if any and do not correspond to clinical symptoms. Our goal, therefore, was to quantify the global decline of the neuronal marker N-acetylaspartate (NAA), as well as gray (GM) and white matter (WM) atrophy after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). Twenty patien...

Network

Cited By