| Literature DB >> 28245815 |
Oun Al-Iedani1, Jeannette Lechner-Scott2,3,4, Karen Ribbons3, Saadallah Ramadan5.
Abstract
Multi voxel magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) is an important imaging tool that combines imaging and spectroscopic techniques. MRSI of the human brain has been beneficially applied to different clinical applications in neurology, particularly in neurooncology but also in multiple sclerosis, stroke and epilepsy. However, a major challenge in conventional MRSI is the longer acquisition time required for adequate signal to be collected. Fast MRSI of the brain in vivo is an alternative approach to reduce scanning time and make MRSI more clinically suitable.Fast MRSI can be categorised into spiral, echo-planar, parallel and turbo imaging techniques, each with its own strengths. After a brief introduction on the basics of non-invasive examination (1H-MRS) and localization techniques principles, different fast MRSI techniques will be discussed from their initial development to the recent innovations with particular emphasis on their capacity to record neurochemical changes in the brain in a variety of pathologies.The clinical applications of whole brain fast spectroscopic techniques, can assist in the assessment of neurochemical changes in the human brain and help in understanding the roles they play in disease. To give a good example of the utilities of these techniques in clinical context, MRSI application in multiple sclerosis was chosen. The available up to date and relevant literature is discussed and an outline of future research is presented.Entities:
Keywords: EPSI; Fast MRSI; Human; In vivo; Multiple Sclerosis; Spiral
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28245815 PMCID: PMC5331701 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-017-0323-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
Fig. 1Two single-voxel localisation methods: a the PRESS sequence; b the STEAM sequence. Note that the three orthogonal slice-selective gradient pulses are indicated by black, green and red colours in the schematic representation. Reproduced with permission from [39]
Fig. 2Signal obtained from prefrontal cortex (PFC) of voxel size (1.5 cm3) from a healthy subject: a at short TE and b at long TE using PRESS approach on a 3 T scanner (Prisma, Siemens, Erlangen)
Fig. 3MRSI data acquired from a 3-year-old girl with an idiopathic developmental delay. Data was acquired using a 2D PRESS-MRSI at 3 T (TE: 135 ms) in the axial plane with voxel size of 1.5 cm3. Reproduced with permission from [39]
Fig. 4Illustrates the data spectroscopy and mapping of brain metabolite of conventional MRSI methods (top line) compared with SENSE-MRSI acquisition methods (bottom line) of a voxel in tumorous tissue and b healthy tissue; with an acquisition time of (14.02 min) and (3.37 min) respectively, and acquisition data parameter (TE/TR: 228/1500 ms), slice thickness (20 mm) and FOV (220 mm). Reproduced with permission from [50]
Fig. 5a In a spiral MRSI, two time-varying readout gradients are administered in the data acquisition period with oscillating spiral trajectories. b Outlines the projection of a k-space trajectory along the kf axis. The spiral trajectories originate from the (kx, ky) plane and repeatedly run a path through the kx, ky, kf spaces with multiple and simultaneous spiral trajectories increasing volumetric acquisition around the kf axis. Reproduced with permission from [39, 56]
Fig. 6Displays the spectral data from three slices using a spiral MRSI technique at 3 T (TE/TR: 144 ms/2 s, FOV: 8 × 9 × 6 cm) using a 32-channel phased array head coil. Reproduced with permission from [58]
Fig. 7Readout strategy for Turbo-MRSI sequence using spin-echo imaging per excitation preceded by water and lipid suppression (CHESS and outer-volume suppression (OVS)). Reproduced with permission from [39]
Fig. 8a EPSI sequences are applied to encode localised spectra with a single readout gradient. b k-space trajectories of echo-planar spectroscopic imaging indicate data acquisition in one TR of the pulse sequence during spectral encoding. Reproduced with permission from [39]
Fig. 9Whole brain mapping and a spectrum of major metabolites, mean water-reference spectroscopic imaging (SI H2O Reference) using EPSI at 3 T from a healthy subject (TE/TR = 70/1710 ms), total acquisition time (26 min), k-space points (50 × 50 × 18), FOV (28 × 28 × 18 cm3) and voxel volume (0.31 cm3). Reproduced with permission from [48]
Fig. 10Illustrates the comparison between two fast MRSI sequences at 3 T: a the 3D-EPSI and b GRAPPA-EPSI sequences, to show the whole brain mapping of metabolites with interleaved water reference acquisition (SI H2O Reference) from a healthy normal subject at intermediate TE (70 ms). Reproduced with permission from [84]
Brain metabolite concentration and acquisition time of various MRSI techniques
| Methods | TE/TR (ms) | Metabolite (mM) | Tacq (min)a | Brain region/ FOV/ voxel size/Bo (Tesla) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3D PRESS-MRSI | 144/1100 | NAA: 10.1 ± 0.64 | 21.12 | Centre of brain/ 12 × 12 × 8 cm3/1 cm3/3 T | [ |
| 3D PRESS-MRSI | 144/1100 | NAA: 6.9 ± 1.3, Cho: 6.5 ± 1.4 Cr: 6.1 ± 1.2 | 17 | Not reported/ 12x12x8 and 16x16x8 cm3/1 cm3/3 T | [ |
| 3D PRESS-MRSI | 144/1100 | Cho/NAA:(0.51–0.54) | 21.12 | Not reported/ 12 × 12 × 8 cm3/ 1 cm3/3 T | [ |
| Multiple 2D-MRSI | 144/ 2300 | NAA:2.5 ± 4.47, Cho:2.94 ± 9.71, Cr:7.3 ± 4.09 | 26 | Whole brain scans/ Not reported | [ |
| 2D-MRSI | 135/1500 | MS patients: NAA:9.48 ± 0.73 | NRb | WM and GM/ 16 × 16 cm2/ 2 cm3/1.5 T | [ |
| 3D PRESS-MRSI with OVS | 144/1500 | Cho/Cr :1.24 | 9 | Whole brain/ 16 × 16 × 16, 18x18x16 cm3/1 cm3/3 T | [ |
Abbreviations: a Tacq acquisition time, b NR Not reported
Brain metabolite concentrations obtained in fast MRSI techniques
| Methods | TE/TR (ms) | Metabolite (mM) | Tacq (min) | Brain region/ FOV/ voxel size/ Cohort/ Bo (Tesla) | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EPSI | 18/1550 | GM in frontal lobe left: NAA:11.10 ± 0.32, tCho:2.04 ± 0.16, Glx:10.22 ± 0.53 | 16 | whole brain/ 28 × 28 × 18 cm3/1 cm3/ 20 HCs/ 3 T | [ |
| EPSI with OVS | 15/2000 | GM: NAA:8.6 ± 0.7, Glu:12.8 ± 1.5, tCho:1.4 ± 0.2. | 8.5 | WM and GM/ 26 cm/ 1 cm3/ 9 HCs/ 3 T | [ |
| 3D | 70/1710 |
aNAA: 595 ± 37.9, Cr: 346 ± 23.9 | 16 | Whole brain/ 28 × 28 × 18 cm3/ 0.31 cm3/ 25 patients with mild traumatic brain injuries (mTBI) & 25 HCs/ 3 T | [ |
| GRAPPA-EPSI | 15/2000 | GM: NAA:15.36 ± 2.62, Glx:18.40 ± 3.19, Cho:3.19 ± 0.58 | 1.5 | WM and GM/ 24 cm/ 0.85 cm3/ 5 HCs/ 3 T | [ |
| 3D SENSE-EPSI | 15/2000 | NAA:9.5 ± 4.3, Cho:1.4 ± 0.9, Glu:8.8 ± 5.2, Cr:7.2 ± 2.8 | 8.5 | WM and GM/ 24 × 24 × 10 cm/ 0.7 cm3/ HCs/ 3 T | [ |
| 3D EPSI-MRSI | 70/1710 |
bGM: NAA:4948 ± 75, Cr: 3461 ± 53, | NA | WM and GM/ 28 × 28 × 18 cm3/ 0.31 cm3/ 88 HCs/ 3 T | [ |
| 3D PRESS-MRSI | 144/1500 | Concentration for age groups (25–32) | 13 | Whole brain/ 32 cm /1 cm3/ 8 HCs/ 1.5 T | [ |
aMean metabolite concentrations averaged over all voxels of WM brain tissue in parietal lobe
bAverage metabolite values in IU
Fig. 11Shows the spectra of voxels in a GM and b WM of healthy and PPMS subjects: c, d acquired from healthy subject in GM and WM, respectively and e, f: acquired from GM and WM regions of a PPMS patient, respectively. Experimental parameters: TE/TR = 135 ms/1500 ms, FOV (16 × 16 cm2, yellow border) and VOI (8 × 8 × 2 cm3, white border). Reproduced with permission from [112]
Fig. 12Spectroscopic data from a typical SPMS brain from three separate regions: [1] MS lesion, [2] CGM and [3] NAWM. The voxels are represented by the numbers and red spots. Experimental parameters: 3D-EPSI (TE/TR = 144/2000 ms), acquisition time (20 min), FOV (24 × 24 × 8 cm3) and slice thickness (4 mm) at 1.5 T. Reproduced with permission from [114]
Brain metabolite concentration were acquired for MS patients and HCs by applying PRESS-MRSI and fast MRSI methods
| Methods | TE/TR (ms) | Metabolite (mM) | Tacq a (min) | Brain region/ FOV/voxel size/Cohort/Bo (Tesla) | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2D-MRSI | 30/3000 | CGM: | 29 | NAWM, CGM/ 30 cm/2.34 mL/ 16 RRMS, 12 HCs/1.5 T | [ |
| 2D-MRSI | 135/1800 | Controls, NAA/Cr: 2.22 ± 0.19 | 13 | WM, NAWM/ 21 × 21 cm/ 2.4 cm3/ 15 PPMS, 13 RRMS & 20 HCs/ 1.5 T. | [ |
| PRESS-MRSI | 30/3000 | NAWM: | NAWM, CGM/ 30x30 cm/ 2.3 mL/ 25 RRMS, 28 HCs/ 1.5 T | [ | |
| 2D-MRSI | 135/1500 | GM: | 7 | WM and GM/ 16 ×16 cm2/ 2 cm3/ 4 PPMS & 4 HCs/ 1.5 T | [ |
| PRESS-MRSI | 30/3000 | NAWM: Controls, tNAA: 9.18 ± 0.6 | NA | NWWM and CGM/ 30x30 cm/ 20 RRMS, 10 HCs /1.5 T | [ |
| 3D-MRSI | 70/1710 | GM: Controls, NAA:8.5 ± 0.6, Cr: 6.8 ± 0.6 | 34 | WM and GM/ 16x16 cm/ 0.75 cm3, 18 RRMS, 10 HCs/ 3 T | [ |
| MRSI | 135/1000 | RRMS, NAA: 8.45 ± 0.88, Cr: 5.2 ± 0.73 | 45 | MS lesion for RRMS & PPMS/ 16×16/ 1.2 cm3/ 15 RRMS, 15 PPMS/ 3 T | [ |
| 2D PRESS-MRSI | 135/1500 | NAWM: | 15 | Fronto-parietal WM/ 16x16 cm/1 cm3/ 27 RRMS, 10 SPMS & 8 HCs/ 3 T | [ |
| EPSI | 272/4000 | Normal VEP, NAA: 7692 ± 632 | 9 | Mid-thalamus / 24 cm/ 9 MS with abnormal VEP& 8 MS normal VEP/ 1.5 T | [ |
| 3D-EPSI | 144/2000 | Central brain: | 20 | Corpus callosum, STB/ 24x24x16 cm/ 1 cm3/ 9 RRMS, 21 SPMS, 18 PPMS & 10 HCs/ 1.5 T | [ |
| EPSI | 144/4300 | NAA/Cr: 1.55 ± 0.1 from RRMS | 20 | Whole brain/ not reported /1 cm3, 20 RRMS & 75 HCs/ 1.5 T | [ |
| Spiral-MRSI | 144/2000 | WM: | 15 | NAWM, GM in supratentorial brain/ 24 cm/ 1.2 mL/ 5 RRMS, 5 SPMS & 9 HCs/ 1.5 T | [ |
| EPSI | 144/4300 | Controls, NAA/Cr: 1.5 ± 0.09 | 20 | Whole brain/ not reported/ 1 cm3, 18 RRMS & 18 HCs/ 1.5 T | [ |
| 3D-EPSI | 20/1720 | GM: | 17.48 | Whole brain/ 28×28×18 cm/ 1 cm3, 19 RRMS & 19 HCs / 3 T | [ |
a Tacq acquisition time