Using a clinical 3T scanner (echo/repetition times, 30/5000 ms), single-voxel MRS data were obtained from the basal ganglia (BG) and centrum semiovale (CS) in 48 healthy neonates (postconceptional age (PCA), 30–43 weeks), nine infants (age, 1–12 months old), and 20 children (age, 4–15 years). Lactate concentrations were calculated using an MRS signal quantification program, LCModel. Correlations between regional lactate concentration and PCA (neonates), or age (all subjects) were investigated.
Absolute lactate concentrations of the BG and CS were as follows: neonates, 0.77 mM (0–2.02) [median (range)] and 0.77 (0–1.42), respectively; infants, 0.38 (0–0.79) and 0.49 (0.17–1.17); and children, 0.17 (0–0.76) and 0.22 (0–0.80). Overall, subjects' lactate concentrations decreased significantly with age (Spearman: BG, n = 61, ρ = −0.38, p = 0.003; CS, n = 68, ρ = −0.57, p < 0.001). However, during the neonatal period no correlations were detected between lactate concentration in either region and PCA.
We determined normal ranges of neonatal lactate concentration, which may prove useful for diagnostic purposes. Further studies regarding changes in brain lactate concentration during development would help clarify the reasons for higher concentrations observed during the neonatal period, and contribute to improvements in diagnoses.