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Human (13)N-ammonia PET studies: the importance of measuring (13)N-ammonia metabolites in blood

Dynamic (13)N-ammonia PET is used to assess ammonia metabolism in brain, liver and muscle based on kinetic modeling of metabolic pathways, using arterial blood (13)N-ammonia as input function. Rosenspire et al. (1990) introduced a solid phase extraction procedure for fractionation of (13)N-content i...

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Autores principales: Keiding, Susanne, Sørensen, Michael, Munk, Ole Lajord, Bender, Dirk
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2850514/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20217201
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11011-010-9181-2
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author Keiding, Susanne
Sørensen, Michael
Munk, Ole Lajord
Bender, Dirk
author_facet Keiding, Susanne
Sørensen, Michael
Munk, Ole Lajord
Bender, Dirk
author_sort Keiding, Susanne
collection PubMed
description Dynamic (13)N-ammonia PET is used to assess ammonia metabolism in brain, liver and muscle based on kinetic modeling of metabolic pathways, using arterial blood (13)N-ammonia as input function. Rosenspire et al. (1990) introduced a solid phase extraction procedure for fractionation of (13)N-content in blood into (13)N-ammonia, (13)N-urea, (13)N-glutamine and (13)N-glutamate. Due to a radioactive half-life for (13)N of 10 min, the procedure is not suitable for blood samples taken beyond 5–7 min after tracer injection. By modifying Rosenspire’s method, we established a method enabling analysis of up to 10 blood samples in the course of 30 min. The modified procedure was validated by HPLC and by 30-min reproducibility studies in humans examined by duplicate (13)N-ammonia injections with a 60-min interval. Blood data from a (13)N-ammonia brain PET study (from Keiding et al. 2006) showed: (1) time courses of (13)N-ammonia fractions could be described adequately by double exponential functions; (2) metabolic conversion of (13)N-ammonia to (13)N-metabolites were in the order: healthy subjects > cirrhotic patients without HE > cirrhotic patients with HE; (3) kinetics of initial tracer distribution in tissue can be assessed by using total (13)N-concentration in blood as input function, whereas assessment of metabolic processes requires (13)N-ammonia measurements.
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spelling pubmed-28505142010-04-16 Human (13)N-ammonia PET studies: the importance of measuring (13)N-ammonia metabolites in blood Keiding, Susanne Sørensen, Michael Munk, Ole Lajord Bender, Dirk Metab Brain Dis Original Paper Dynamic (13)N-ammonia PET is used to assess ammonia metabolism in brain, liver and muscle based on kinetic modeling of metabolic pathways, using arterial blood (13)N-ammonia as input function. Rosenspire et al. (1990) introduced a solid phase extraction procedure for fractionation of (13)N-content in blood into (13)N-ammonia, (13)N-urea, (13)N-glutamine and (13)N-glutamate. Due to a radioactive half-life for (13)N of 10 min, the procedure is not suitable for blood samples taken beyond 5–7 min after tracer injection. By modifying Rosenspire’s method, we established a method enabling analysis of up to 10 blood samples in the course of 30 min. The modified procedure was validated by HPLC and by 30-min reproducibility studies in humans examined by duplicate (13)N-ammonia injections with a 60-min interval. Blood data from a (13)N-ammonia brain PET study (from Keiding et al. 2006) showed: (1) time courses of (13)N-ammonia fractions could be described adequately by double exponential functions; (2) metabolic conversion of (13)N-ammonia to (13)N-metabolites were in the order: healthy subjects > cirrhotic patients without HE > cirrhotic patients with HE; (3) kinetics of initial tracer distribution in tissue can be assessed by using total (13)N-concentration in blood as input function, whereas assessment of metabolic processes requires (13)N-ammonia measurements. Springer US 2010-03-09 2010 /pmc/articles/PMC2850514/ /pubmed/20217201 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11011-010-9181-2 Text en © The Author(s) 2010 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Keiding, Susanne
Sørensen, Michael
Munk, Ole Lajord
Bender, Dirk
Human (13)N-ammonia PET studies: the importance of measuring (13)N-ammonia metabolites in blood
title Human (13)N-ammonia PET studies: the importance of measuring (13)N-ammonia metabolites in blood
title_full Human (13)N-ammonia PET studies: the importance of measuring (13)N-ammonia metabolites in blood
title_fullStr Human (13)N-ammonia PET studies: the importance of measuring (13)N-ammonia metabolites in blood
title_full_unstemmed Human (13)N-ammonia PET studies: the importance of measuring (13)N-ammonia metabolites in blood
title_short Human (13)N-ammonia PET studies: the importance of measuring (13)N-ammonia metabolites in blood
title_sort human (13)n-ammonia pet studies: the importance of measuring (13)n-ammonia metabolites in blood
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2850514/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20217201
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11011-010-9181-2
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