Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: Spectral patterns observed from an in vivo phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy study

2014 ◽  
Vol 60 (4) ◽  
pp. 809-815 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jill M. Abrigo ◽  
Jiayun Shen ◽  
Vincent W.-S. Wong ◽  
David K.-W. Yeung ◽  
Grace L.-H. Wong ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren M. Smith ◽  
Conrad B. Pitts ◽  
Lanette J. Friesen-Waldner ◽  
Neetin H. Prabhu ◽  
Katherine E. Mathers ◽  
...  

AbstractBACKGROUNDAlterations in glycolysis and oxidative pathways are central to the increasing incidence of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), highlighting a need for in vivo, non-invasive technologies to understand the development of hepatic metabolic aberrations in lean NAFLD.PURPOSE/HYPOTHESISTo use hyperpolarized magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) and proton density fat fraction (PDFF) MRI techniques to investigate effects of a chronic, life-long exposure to the Western Diet (WD) in a model of NAFLD and identify cellular metabolite changes and correlations related to enzyme activity. It is hypothesized that exposure to the WD will result in NAFLD in association with altered pyruvate metabolism.STUDY TYPEProspective POPULATION/SUBJECTS/PHANTOM/SPECIMEN/ANIMAL MODEL: 28 male guinea pigs were weaned onto a control diet or WD.FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE3T; T1, T2, IDEAL, broadband PRESS MRS.ASSESSMENTMedian PDFF was calculated in the liver and hind limbs. [1-13C]pyruvate dynamic MRS in the liver was quantified by the time to peak (TTP), calculated as the time from pyruvate peak to metabolite peak. After a recovery period, animals were euthanized, and tissue was analyzed for lipid and cholesterol concentration and enzyme level and activity.STATISTICAL TESTSUnpaired Student’s t-tests were used to determine differences in measurements between the two diet groups. The Pearson correlation coefficient was calculated to determine correlations between measurements.RESULTSLife-long WD consumption resulted in significantly higher liver PDFF correlated with elevated triglyceride content in the liver. The WD group exhibited a decreased TTP for lactate production, and ex vivo analysis highlighted increased liver lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity. DATA CONCLUSION: PDFF MRI results suggest differential fat deposition patterns occurring in animals fed a life-long WD, corresponding with increased liver triglyceride levels characteristic of lean NAFLD. The decreased liver lactate TTP and increased ex vivo LDH activity suggest lipid accumulation occurs in association with a shift from oxidative metabolism to anaerobic glycolytic metabolism in WD livers.


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