RESUMEN
In the technique presented here, dubbed 'qMRS', we quantify the change in 1H MRS signal following administration of 2H-labeled glucose. As in recent human DMRS studies, we administer [6,6'-2H2]-glucose orally to healthy subjects. Since 2H is not detectable by 1H MRS, the transfer of the 2H label from glucose to a downstream metabolite leads to a reduction in the corresponding 1H MRS resonance of the metabolite, even if the total concentration of both isoforms remains constant. Moreover, introduction of the deuterium label alters the splitting pattern of the proton resonances, making indirect detection of the deuterated forms- as well as the direct detection of the decrease in unlabeled form- possible even without a 2H coil. Because qMRS requires only standard 1H MRS acquisition methods, it can be performed using commonly implemented single voxel spectroscopy (SVS) and chemical shift imaging (CSI) sequences. In this work, we implement qMRS in semi-LASER based CSI, generating dynamic maps arising from the fitted spectra, and demonstrating the feasibility of using qMRS and qCSI to monitor dynamic metabolism in the human brain using a 7T scanner with no auxiliary hardware.