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Showing papers by "Chris Boesch published in 2021"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recommendations are given for the acquisition of three particular metabolites (intramyocellular lipids, carnosine and acetylcarnitine) and for preconditioning of experiments and instructions to study volunteers.
Abstract: Skeletal muscle phosphorus-31 31 P MRS is the oldest MRS methodology to be applied to in vivo metabolic research. The technical requirements of 31 P MRS in skeletal muscle depend on the research question, and to assess those questions requires understanding both the relevant muscle physiology, and how 31 P MRS methods can probe it. Here we consider basic signal-acquisition parameters related to radio frequency excitation, TR, TE, spectral resolution, shim and localisation. We make specific recommendations for studies of resting and exercising muscle, including magnetisation transfer, and for data processing. We summarise the metabolic information that can be quantitatively assessed with 31 P MRS, either measured directly or derived by calculations that depend on particular metabolic models, and we give advice on potential problems of interpretation. We give expected values and tolerable ranges for some measured quantities, and minimum requirements for reporting acquisition parameters and experimental results in publications. Reliable examination depends on a reproducible setup, standardised preconditioning of the subject, and careful control of potential difficulties, and we summarise some important considerations and potential confounders. Our recommendations include the quantification and standardisation of contraction intensity, and how best to account for heterogeneous muscle recruitment. We highlight some pitfalls in the assessment of mitochondrial function by analysis of phosphocreatine (PCr) recovery kinetics. Finally, we outline how complementary techniques (near-infrared spectroscopy, arterial spin labelling, BOLD and various other MRI and 1 H MRS measurements) can help in the physiological/metabolic interpretation of 31 P MRS studies by providing information about blood flow and oxygen delivery/utilisation. Our recommendations will assist in achieving the fullest possible reliable picture of muscle physiology and pathophysiology.

64 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Muscle fat content in the healthy infraspinatus muscle does correlate with age and BMI, but not with the CSA, and Muscle fat content measurement in the rotator cuff using Dixon MRI showed a high reliability between slice Y and the entire muscle.
Abstract: Muscle fat content of the rotator cuff increases after a tear. In the healthy rotator cuff, the influence of age, body mass index (BMI) and critical shoulder angle (CSA) on muscle fat content is unknown. The primary aim was to correlate muscle fat content with age, BMI and CSA. The secondary aims were (1) to correlate muscle fat content in the entire muscle and slice Y (most lateral sagittal slice with scapular spine) and (2) assessed the reliability for CSA measurement in MRI. In 26 healthy shoulders (17 subjects), aged 40–65 years, BMI 20–35 kg/m2, Goutallier grade 0, Dixon MRI was applied. The CSA was > 35° in 14 shoulders and 0.9) and no systematical deviation in Bland–Altman analysis. Muscle fat content in the healthy infraspinatus muscle does correlate with age and BMI, but not with the CSA. Muscle fat content measurement in the rotator cuff using Dixon MRI showed a high reliability between slice Y and the entire muscle. III.

2 citations