Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) is the only biomedical imaging method that can noninvasively detect endogenous signals from the neurotransmitter γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the human brain. Its increasing popularity has been aided by improvements in scanner hardware and acquisition methodology, as well as by broader access to pulse sequences that can selectively detect GABA, in particular J-difference spectral editing sequences. Nevertheless, implementations of GABA-edited MRS remain diverse across research sites, making comparisons between studies challenging. This large-scale multi-vendor, multi-site study seeks to better understand the factors that impact measurement outcomes of GABA-edited MRS. An international consortium of 24 research sites was formed. Data from 272 healthy adults were acquired on scanners from the three major MRI vendors and analyzed using the Gannet processing pipeline. MRS data were acquired in the medial parietal lobe with standard GABA+ and macromolecule- (MM-) suppressed GABA editing. The coefficient of variation across the entire cohort was 12% for GABA+ measurements and 28% for MM-suppressed GABA measurements. A multilevel analysis revealed that most of the variance (72%) in the GABA+ data was accounted for by differences between participants within-site, while site-level differences accounted for comparatively more variance (20%) than vendor-level differences (8%). For MM-suppressed GABA data, the variance was distributed equally between site- (50%) and participant-level (50%) differences. The findings show that GABA+ measurements exhibit strong agreement when implemented with a standard protocol. There is, however, increased variability for MM-suppressed GABA measurements that is attributed in part to differences in site-to-site data acquisition. This study’s protocol establishes a framework for future methodological standardization of GABA-edited MRS, while the results provide valuable benchmarks for the MRS community.
Accurate and reliable quantification of brain metabolites measured in vivo using 1 H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) is a topic of continued interest in the field. Aside from differences in the basic approach to quantification, the quantification of metabolite data acquired at different sites and on different platforms poses an additional methodological challenge. In this study, we analyze spectrally edited -aminobutyric acid (GABA) MRS data and quantify GABA levels relative to an internal tissue water reference. Data from 284 volunteers scanned across 25 research sites were collected using standard GABA+ editing. Unsuppressed water acquisitions from the same volume of interest were acquired for signal referencing. Whole-brain T1-weighted structural images were acquired and tissue-segmented to determine gray matter, white matter and cerebrospinal fluid voxel tissue fractions. Water-referenced GABA+ measurements were fully corrected for tissue-dependent signal relaxation and water visibility effects. The cohort-wide coefficient of variation was 17%, which was largely driven by vendor-related differences according to a linear mixed-effects analysis. The mean within-site coefficient of variation was 9%. Vendor differences contributed 53% to the total variance in the data, while the remaining variance was attributed to site-(11%) and participant-level (36%) effects. Results from an exploratory analysis suggested that the vendor differences were related to the water signal acquisition. Discounting the observed vendor-specific effects, water-referenced GABA+ measurements exhibit levels of variance similar to creatine-referenced GABA+ measurements. It is concluded that quantification using internal tissue water referencing remains a viable and reliable method for the in vivo quantification of GABA+ levels.
Background:The hardware and software differences between MR vendors and individual sites influence the quantification of MR spectroscopy data. An analysis of a large data set may help to better understand sources of the total variance in quantified metabolite levels.Purpose: To compare multisite quantitative brain MR spectroscopy data acquired in healthy participants at 26 sites by using the vendor-supplied single-voxel point-resolved spectroscopy (PRESS) sequence. Materials and Methods:An MR spectroscopy protocol to acquire short-echo-time PRESS data from the midparietal region of the brain was disseminated to 26 research sites operating 3.0-T MR scanners from three different vendors. In this prospective study, healthy participants were scanned between July 2016 and December 2017. Data were analyzed by using software with simulated basis sets customized for each vendor implementation. The proportion of total variance attributed to vendor-, site-, and participant-related effects was estimated by using a linear mixed-effects model. P values were derived through parametric bootstrapping of the linear mixed-effects models (denoted P boot ). Results:In total, 296 participants (mean age, 26 years 6 4.6; 155 women and 141 men) were scanned. Good-quality data were recorded from all sites, as evidenced by a consistent linewidth of N-acetylaspartate (range, 4.4-5.0 Hz), signal-to-noise ratio (range, 174-289), and low Cramér-Rao lower bounds (5%) for all of the major metabolites. Among the major metabolites, no vendor effects were found for levels of myo-inositol (P boot . .90), N-acetylaspartate and N-acetylaspartylglutamate (P boot = .13), or glutamate and glutamine (P boot = .11). Among the smaller resonances, no vendor effects were found for ascorbate (P boot = .08), aspartate (P boot . .90), glutathione (P boot . .90), or lactate (P boot = .28). Conclusion:Multisite multivendor single-voxel MR spectroscopy studies performed at 3.0 T can yield results that are coherent across vendors, provided that vendor differences in pulse sequence implementation are accounted for in data analysis. However, the siterelated effects on variability were more profound and suggest the need for further standardization of spectroscopic protocols.
In his recent report, Lord Adebowale (2013) described mental health issues as "core police business". The recent retrenchment in mental health and wider public services mean that the demands on the police in this area are likely to increase. Mental health triage is a concept that has been adapted from general and mental health nursing for use in a policing context. The overall aim of triage is to ensure more effective health outcomes and the more effective use of resources. This article examines the current policy and practice in this area. It then goes on to explore the models of mental health triage that have been developed to try and improve working between mental health services and the police.
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