| Literature DB >> 20665786 |
Douglas E Prah1, Eric S Paulson, Andrew S Nencka, Kathleen M Schmainda.
Abstract
Diffusion-weighted MRI is an intrinsically low signal-to-noise ratio application due to the application of diffusion-weighting gradients and the consequent longer echo times. The signal-to-noise ratio worsens with increasing image resolution and diffusion imaging methods that use multiple and higher b-values. At low signal-to-noise ratios, standard magnitude reconstructed diffusion-weighted images are confounded by the existence of a rectified noise floor, producing poor estimates of diffusion metrics. Herein, we present a simple method of rectified noise floor suppression that involves phase correction of the real data. This approach was evaluated for diffusion-weighted imaging data, obtained from ethanol and water phantoms and the brain of a healthy volunteer. The parameter fits from monoexponential, biexponential, and stretched-exponential diffusion models were computed using phase-corrected real data and magnitude data. The results demonstrate that this newly developed simple approach of using phase-corrected real images acts to reduce or even suppress the confounding effects of a rectified noise floor, thereby producing more accurate estimates of diffusion parameters.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20665786 PMCID: PMC4321728 DOI: 10.1002/mrm.22407
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Magn Reson Med ISSN: 0740-3194 Impact factor: 4.668