• Neurology · Mar 2006

    Comparative Study

    Cerebral metabolites in HIV-infected children followed for 10 months with 1H-MRS.

    • M A Keller, T N Venkatraman, M A Thomas, A Deveikis, C Lopresti, J Hayes, N Berman, I Walot, T Ernst, and L Chang.
    • Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance, CA 90502, USA. keller@labiomed.org
    • Neurology. 2006 Mar 28; 66 (6): 874-9.

    BackgroundPrevious studies have shown that HIV-infected children have abnormal cerebral metabolites, measured by proton MR spectroscopy (1H MRS), but the stability of these measurements over time has not been described in HIV-infected children. The authors recently reported a study of cerebral metabolites in 20 HIV-infected children (6 to 16 years of age); the current study followed 12 of these children (10.0 years +/- 3.7 years) and repeated the MR spectroscopy at 24.1 +/- 3.7 weeks and 42.2 +/- 3.5 weeks following the entry time with repeated neuropsychological testing.Methods1H MR spectra were acquired at 1.5 T (GE Signa, PRESS localization, repetition time = 3,000 msec, echo time = 30 msec). Five brain regions were studied: right frontal white matter, left frontal white matter, right basal ganglia, right hippocampus, and midfrontal gray matter. The concentrations of N-acetylaspartate (NAA), choline (CHO), creatine (CR), and myo-inositol (mI) and the ratio of each metabolite to CR were determined.ResultsThere were no changes in the metabolite concentrations or metabolite/CR ratios at the three time periods. Similarly, during this follow-up period, HIV-positive children showed no changes in clinical signs, HIV viral loads, CD4%, or CD4 counts, except for improved spatial memory with repeat testing.ConclusionIn a clinically and neurologically stable group of HIV-infected children, cerebral metabolites were stable over a 10-month time period, suggesting that it is possible to assess changes in cerebral metabolites as a measure of cerebral health, but longer follow-up in a larger sample is needed.

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