Weidman E R, Charles H C, Negro-Vilar R, Sullivan M J, MacFall J R
Department of Radiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710.
Invest Radiol. 1991 Apr;26(4):309-16. doi: 10.1097/00004424-199104000-00005.
Using 31P spectroscopy and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), the authors studied changes in muscle phosphorous metabolites and T2 with isometric knee extension to evaluate the potential role of T2 images in coil placement for exercise spectroscopy studies. Increased signal intensity was visible in active muscles on T2 images after exercise. Calculated T2-weighted values were elevated immediately after exercise in the quadriceps (P less than .01). T2 increases for individual quadricep muscles varied, with the largest changes in the rectus femoris and the least in the vastus lateralis. 31P spectroscopy studies demonstrated similar findings: percent change in T2 correlated positively with inorganic phosphorus to phosphocreatine ratio (Pi/PCr) (r = 0.89, P less than .01) and negatively with pH (r = -0.88, P less than .01). The correlations between imaging and spectroscopy suggest that T2 images may allow more precise placement of phosphorous coils in exercise studies. The heterogeneity of T2 changes within the quadriceps with exercise suggests that assumptions about muscle activity may be misleading. T2 images may provide muscle activity verification for exercise studies.