| Literature DB >> 19161170 |
Kawin Setsompop1, Vijayanand Alagappan, Borjan A Gagoski, Andreas Potthast, Franz Hebrank, Ulrich Fontius, Franz Schmitt, L L Wald, E Adalsteinsson.
Abstract
Chemical shift imaging benefits from signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and chemical shift dispersion increases at stronger main field such as 7 Tesla, but the associated shorter radiofrequency (RF) wavelengths encountered require B1+ mitigation over both the spatial field of view (FOV) and a specified spectral bandwidth. The bandwidth constraint presents a challenge for previously proposed spatially tailored B1+ mitigation methods, which are based on a type of echovolumnar trajectory referred to as "spokes" or "fast-kz". Although such pulses, in conjunction with parallel excitation methodology, can efficiently mitigate large B1+ inhomogeneities and achieve relatively short pulse durations with slice-selective excitations, they exhibit a narrow-band off-resonance response and may not be suitable for applications that require B1+ mitigation over a large spectral bandwidth. This work outlines a design method for a general parallel spectral-spatial excitation that achieves a target-error minimization simultaneously over a bandwidth of frequencies and a specified spatial-domain. The technique is demonstrated for slab-selective excitation with in-plane B1+ mitigation over a 600-Hz bandwidth. The pulse design method is validated in a water phantom at 7T using an eight-channel transmit array system. The results show significant increases in the pulse's spectral bandwidth, with no additional pulse duration penalty and only a minor tradeoff in spatial B1+ mitigation compared to the standard spoke-based parallel RF design. Copyright 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19161170 PMCID: PMC2632721 DOI: 10.1002/mrm.21834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Magn Reson Med ISSN: 0740-3194 Impact factor: 4.668