Deuterium metabolic imaging (DMI) is a novel metabolic imaging technique where 2H MRSI is combined with administration of 2H-labeled substrates. DMI data acquired at metabolic steady-state reveal the relative activities of metabolic pathways, whereas dynamically acquired DMI also provides the metabolic pathway activity rates. The analysis of dynamic DMI data is complicated by the presence of deuterium label loss between deuterated products and water. Here we validated metabolic rates obtained with dynamic DMI with those established using more traditional, 13C-based MR methods.
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