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Gadolinium Deposition in the Rat Brain Measured with Quantitative MRI versus Elemental Mass Spectrometry.
Hua, Ning; Minaeva, Olga; Lupoli, Nicola; Franz, Erich S; Liu, Xiuping; Moncaster, Juliet A; Babcock, Katharine J; Jara, Hernán; Tripodis, Yorghos; Guermazi, Ali; Soto, Jorge A; Anderson, Stephan W; Goldstein, Lee E.
Afiliação
  • Hua N; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Minaeva O; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Lupoli N; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Franz ES; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Liu X; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Moncaster JA; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Babcock KJ; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Jara H; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Tripodis Y; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Guermazi A; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Soto JA; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Anderson SW; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
  • Goldstein LE; From the Departments of Radiology (N.H., O.M., N.L., X.L., J.A.M., H.J., A.G., J.A.S., S.W.A., L.E.G.), Neurology (L.E.G.), Pathology & Laboratory Medicine (L.E.G.), Anatomy & Neurobiology (K.J.B.), and Biostatistics (Y.T.), Boston University School of Medicine, 670 Albany St, 4th Floor, Bos
Radiology ; 306(1): 244-251, 2023 01.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36125373
ABSTRACT
Background T1-weighted MRI and quantitative longitudinal relaxation rate (R1) mapping have been used to evaluate gadolinium retention in the brain after gadolinium-based contrast agent (GBCA) administration. Whether MRI measures accurately reflect gadolinium regional distribution and concentration in the brain remains unclear. Purpose To compare gadolinium retention in rat forebrain measured with in vivo quantitative MRI R1 and ex vivo laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) mapping after gadobenate, gadopentetate, gadodiamide, or gadobutrol administration. Materials and Methods Adult female Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly assigned to one of five groups (eight per group) and administered gadobenate, gadopentetate, gadodiamide, gadobutrol (2.4 mmol/kg per week for 5 weeks), or saline (4.8 mL/kg per week for 5 weeks). MRI R1 mapping was performed at baseline and 1 week after the final injection to determine R1 and ΔR1. Postmortem brains from the same rats were analyzed with LA-ICP-MS elemental mapping to determine regional gadolinium concentrations. Student t tests were performed to compare results between GBCA and saline groups. Results Rats that were administered gadobenate showed gadolinium-related MRI ΔR1 in 39.5% of brain volume (ΔR1 = 0.087 second-1 ± 0.051); gadopentetate, 20.6% (ΔR1 = 0.069 second-1 ± 0.018); gadodiamide, 5.4% (ΔR1 = 0.055 second-1 ± 0.019); and gadobutrol, 2.2% (ΔR1 = 0.052 second-1 ± 0.041). Agent-specific gadolinium-related ΔR1 was detected in multiple forebrain regions (neocortex, hippocampus, dentate gyrus, thalamus, and caudate-putamen) in rats treated with gadobenate or gadopentetate, whereas rats treated with gadodiamide showed gadolinium-related ΔR1 in caudate-putamen. By contrast, LA-ICP-MS elemental mapping showed a similar regional distribution pattern of heterogeneous retained gadolinium in the forebrain of rats treated with gadobenate, gadopentetate, or gadodiamide, with the average gadolinium concentration of 0.45 µg · g-1 ± 0.07, 0.50 µg · g-1 ± 0.10, and 0.60 µg · g-1 ± 0.11, respectively. Low levels (0.01 µg · g-1 ± 0.00) of retained gadolinium were detected in the forebrain of gadobutrol-treated rats. Conclusion Differences in in vivo MRI longitudinal relaxation rate versus ex vivo elemental mass spectrometry measures of retained gadolinium in rat forebrains suggest that some forms of retained gadolinium may escape detection with MRI. © RSNA, 2022 Online supplemental material is available for this article.
Assuntos

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Compostos Organometálicos / Gadolínio Limite: Animals Idioma: En Revista: Radiology Ano de publicação: 2023 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Compostos Organometálicos / Gadolínio Limite: Animals Idioma: En Revista: Radiology Ano de publicação: 2023 Tipo de documento: Article