Publication
Title
Awake F-18-FDG PET imaging of memantine-induced brain activation and test-retest in freely running mice
Author
Abstract
PET scans of the mouse brain are usually performed with anesthesia to immobilize the animal. However, it is desirable to avoid the confounding factor of anesthesia in mouse-brain response. Methods: We developed and validated brain PET imaging of awake, freely moving mice. Head-motion tracking was performed using radioactive point-source markers, and we used the tracking information for PET-image motion correction. Regional F-18-FDG brain uptake in a test, retest, and memantine-challenge study was measured in awake (n = 8) and anesthetized (n = 8) C57BL/6 mice. An awake uptake period was considered for the anesthesia scans. Results: Awake (motion-corrected) PET images showed an F-18-FDG uptake pattern comparable to the pattern of anesthetized mice. The test-retest variability (represented by the intraclass correlation coefficient) of the regional SUV quantification in the awake animals (0.424-0.555) was marginally lower than that in the anesthetized animals (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.491-0.629) over the different regions. The increased memantine-induced F-18-FDG uptake was more pronounced in awake (+63.6%) than in anesthetized (+24.2%) animals. Additional behavioral information, acquired for awake animals, showed increased motor activity on a memantine challenge (total distance traveled, 18.2 +/- 5.28 m) compared with test-retest (6.49 +/- 2.21 m). Conclusion: The present method enables brain PET imaging on awake mice, thereby avoiding the confounding effects of anesthesia on the PET reading. It allows the simultaneous measurement of behavioral information during PET acquisitions. The method does not require any additional hardware, and it can be deployed in typical high-throughput scan protocols.
Language
English
Source (journal)
The Journal of nuclear medicine. - New York
Publication
New York : 2019
ISSN
0161-5505
DOI
10.2967/JNUMED.118.218669
Volume/pages
60 :6 (2019) , p. 844-850
ISI
000470084400033
Pubmed ID
30442754
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
Non-invasive motion tracking and motion adaptive resolution modeling for awake rat brain positron emission tomography.
Non-invasive motion tracking for awake rat brain positron emission tomography with in vivo validation.
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 25.06.2019
Last edited 02.10.2024
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