Background: Sodium homeostasis is disrupted in many cardiovascular diseases, which makes non-invasive sodium storage assessment desirable. In this regard, sodium MRI has shown its potential to reveal differences in sodium content between healthy and diseased tissues as well as treatment-related changes of sodium content. When different tissues are affected disparately, simultaneous assessment of these compartments is expected to provide better information about sodium distribution, reduce examination time, and improve clinical efficiency.
Objectives: 1) to investigate sodium storage of calf and pectoral muscle in health, disease, and quantify changes following medical treatment; 2) to demonstrate homogenous disruption in skeletal muscle sodium storage in patients with primary hyperaldosteronism (PHA).
Methods: We assessed sodium storage levels (relative sodium signal intensity, rSSI) in the calf and pectoral muscles of 8 patients with primary hyperaldosteronism prior and after treatment, and 12 age- and sex-matched healthy volunteers.
Results: Calf and pectoral muscle compartments exhibited similar sodium content both in healthy subjects (calf vs pectoral rSSI: 0.14±0.01 vs. 0.14±0.03) and PHA patients (calf vs pectoral rSSI: 0.19±0.03 vs 0.18±0.03). Further, we observed similar treatment related changes in pectoral and calf muscles in the patients (proportional rSSI change calf: 26%; pectoral: 28%).
Conclusion: We found that sodium was distributed uniformly and behaved equally in different skeletal muscles in Conn's syndrome. This allows to measure both heart and skeletal muscle sodium signals simultaneously by a single measurement without repositioning the patient. This increases 23Na-MRI's clinical feasibility as an innovative technique to monitor sodium storage.