Open AccessTechnical Note
Triglyceride Saturation in Patients at Risk of NASH and NAFLD: A Cross-Sectional Study
by
Mark Bydder, Tanya Chavez, Jessica Lam, Walter Henderson, Nick Pinto, Roxana Chavarria, Alex D. Pham, Rohit Loomba, Jeff Schwimmer, Claude Sirlin and Gavin Hamilton
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2326
Abstract
Chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is commonly used to estimate the amount of fat in tissues, namely the proton density fat fraction (PDFF). In addition to PDFF, the type of fat can be inferred and characterized in terms of the number of
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Chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is commonly used to estimate the amount of fat in tissues, namely the proton density fat fraction (PDFF). In addition to PDFF, the type of fat can be inferred and characterized in terms of the number of double bonds (NDB), number of methylene-interrupted double bonds (NMIDB) and the chain length (CL) of the fatty acid chains. The saturation index is potentially a marker for metabolic disorders. This study assesses the feasibility of estimating these parameters independently or in a constrained manner. Correlations with spectroscopy were measured in 109 subjects’ subcutaneous and visceral fat depots (
p = 2 × 10
−28), and with the NAFLD Activity Score (NAS) from histological evaluation of biopsies. The findings indicate that imaging estimates are comparable to spectroscopy (
p = 0.0002), but there is no significant association of NDB with NAS (
p = 0.1).
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