학술논문

The Potential of Metabolic Imaging
Document Type
article
Source
Seminars in Nuclear Medicine. 46(1)
Subject
Biomedical Imaging
Bioengineering
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Detection
screening and diagnosis
4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies
Aetiology
Cancer
Animals
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Metabolism
Molecular Imaging
Positron-Emission Tomography
Clinical Sciences
Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Language
Abstract
Metabolic imaging is a field of molecular imaging that focuses and targets changes in metabolic pathways for the evaluation of different clinical conditions. Targeting and quantifying metabolic changes noninvasively is a powerful approach to facilitate diagnosis and evaluate therapeutic response. This review addresses only techniques targeting metabolic pathways. Other molecular imaging strategies, such as affinity or receptor imaging or microenvironment-dependent methods are beyond the scope of this review. Here we describe the current state of the art in clinically translatable metabolic imaging modalities. Specifically, we focus on PET and MR spectroscopy, including conventional (1)H- and (13)C-MR spectroscopy at thermal equilibrium and hyperpolarized MRI. In this article, we first provide an overview of metabolic pathways that are altered in many pathologic conditions and the corresponding probes and techniques used to study those alterations. We then describe the application of metabolic imaging to several common diseases, including cancer, neurodegeneration, cardiac ischemia, and infection or inflammation.