Literature DB >> 32176828

High-resolution short-T2 MRI using a high-performance gradient.

Romain Froidevaux1, Markus Weiger1, Manuela B Rösler1, David O Brunner1, Benjamin E Dietrich1, Jonas Reber1, Klaas P Pruessmann1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To achieve high resolution in imaging of short-T2 materials and tissues by using a high-performance human-sized gradient insert with strength up to 200 mT/m and 100% duty cycle.
METHODS: Dedicated short-T2 methodology and hardware are used, such as the pointwise encoding time reduction with radial acquisition (PETRA) technique with modulated excitation pulses, optimized radio-frequency hardware, and a high-performance gradient insert. A theoretical analysis of actual spatial resolution and SNR is provided to support the choice of scan parameters and interpretation of the results. Imaging is performed in resolution phantoms, animal specimen, and human volunteers at both conventional and maximum available gradient strengths and compared using image subtraction.
RESULTS: Calculations suggest that increasing gradient strength beyond conventional values considerably improves both actual resolution and SNR efficiency in short-T2 imaging. Resolution improvements are confirmed in all investigated samples, in particular 2 mm slots were resolved in a hard-plastic plate with T2 ≈ 10 μs and in vivo musculoskeletal images were acquired at isotropic 200 μm resolution. Expected improvements in signal yield are realized in fine structures benefitting from high resolution but to less extent in regions of low contrast where decay-related blurring leads to signal overlap between neighboring locations.
CONCLUSION: Strong gradients with high duty cycle enable short-T2 imaging at unprecedentedly high resolution, holding the potential for improving MRI of, eg, bone, tendon, lung, or teeth. Moreover, it allows direct access of tissues with T2 of tens of microseconds such as myelin or collagen.
© 2020 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  PETRA; PSF; SNR; gradient duty cycle; high bandwidth; point spread function; rapid transverse relaxation; signal-to-noise ratio

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32176828     DOI: 10.1002/mrm.28254

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Magn Reson Med        ISSN: 0740-3194            Impact factor:   4.668


  4 in total

1.  Brain ultrashort T2 component imaging using a short TR adiabatic inversion recovery prepared dual-echo ultrashort TE sequence with complex echo subtraction (STAIR-dUTE-ES).

Authors:  Ya-Jun Ma; Hyungseok Jang; Zhao Wei; Mei Wu; Eric Y Chang; Jody Corey-Bloom; Graeme M Bydder; Jiang Du
Journal:  J Magn Reson       Date:  2020-12-28       Impact factor: 2.229

Review 2.  New acquisition techniques and their prospects for the achievable resolution of fMRI.

Authors:  Saskia Bollmann; Markus Barth
Journal:  Prog Neurobiol       Date:  2020-10-23       Impact factor: 11.685

3.  Pulse encoding for ZTE imaging: RF excitation without dead-time penalty.

Authors:  Romain Froidevaux; Markus Weiger; Klaas P Pruessmann
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2021-11-14       Impact factor: 3.737

4.  HYFI: Hybrid filling of the dead-time gap for faster zero echo time imaging.

Authors:  Romain Froidevaux; Markus Weiger; Manuela B Rösler; David O Brunner; Klaas P Pruessmann
Journal:  NMR Biomed       Date:  2021-02-23       Impact factor: 4.044

  4 in total

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