The aim of this project was to investigate the time course of macromolecular (MM) background spectrum during healthy aging. Recruiting a structured, cross-sectional cohort of 100 participants (10 male and 10 female subject per decade: 20s; 30s; 40s; 50s; and 60s), we acquired metabolite-nulled short-TE PRESS data and modeled the MM spectrum as a series of Gaussian signals at literature-defined chemical shifts. Linear regression of water-scaled MM signal areas revealed no significant relationship between age and MM signal areas, suggesting the MM spectrum may be more stable than has been suggested in the literature.
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