Differential distribution of NAA and NAAG in human brain as determined by quantitative localized proton MRS

Abstract
Quantitative proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy was performed in frontal, parietal and occipital white and gray matter of young adults with use of a fully relaxed, short‐echo time stimulated echo acquisition mode localization sequence at 2.0 T. Separate concentrations of the neuronal compounds N‐acetylaspartate (NAA) and N‐acetylaspartylglutamate (NAAG) were obtained by user‐independent spectral analysis (LCModel). Except for occipital gray matter in which an NAA concentration of 10.1±1.0 mM correlated with enhanced neuronal density in visual cortex, NAA was found to be homogeneously distributed throughout cortical white and gray matter at a concentration of 8.0–8.9 mM. NAAG concentrations of 1.5–2.7 mM were higher in white matter than levels of 0.6–1.5 mM found in gray matter, contributing up to 25% of total N‐acetyl‐containing compounds. The frontal to parieto‐occipital increase of both gray and white matter NAAG levels is also reflected in the distribution of total NAA. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.