Literature DB >> 32307749

Impact of gradient imperfections on bone water quantification with UTE MRI.

Xia Zhao1, Hyunyeol Lee1, Hee Kwon Song1, Cheng-Chieh Cheng1, Felix W Wehrli1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The impact of gradient imperfections on UTE images and UTE image-derived bone water quantification was investigated at 3 T field strength.
METHODS: The effects of simple gradient time delays and eddy currents on UTE images, as well as the effects of gradient error corrections, were studied with simulation and phantom experiments. The k-space trajectory was mapped with a 2D sequence with phase encoding on both spatial axes by measuring the phase of the signal in small time increments during ramp-up of the read gradient. In vivo 3D UTE images were reconstructed with and without gradient error compensation to determine the bias in bone water quantification. Finally, imaging was performed on 2 equally configured Siemens TIM Trio systems (Siemens Medical Solutions, Erlangen, Germany) to investigate the impact of such gradient imperfections on inter-scanner measurement bias.
RESULTS: Compared to values derived from UTE images with full gradient error compensation, total bone water was found to deviate substantially with no (up to 17%) or partial (delay-only) compensation (up to 10.8%). Bound water, obtained with inversion recovery-prepared UTE, was somewhat less susceptible to gradient errors (up to 2.2% for both correction strategies). Inter-scanner comparison indicated a statistically significant bias between measurements from the 2 MR systems for both total and bound water, which either vanished or was substantially reduced following gradient error correction.
CONCLUSION: Gradient imperfections impose spatially dependent artifacts on UTE images, which compromise not only bone water quantification accuracy but also inter-scanner measurement agreement if left uncompensated.
© 2020 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  UTE; bone water; gradient delays; k-space trajectory correction

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32307749      PMCID: PMC7348668          DOI: 10.1002/mrm.28272

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


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