Literature DB >> 33754420

Fast, regional three-dimensional hybrid (1D-Hadamard 2D-rosette) proton MR spectroscopic imaging in the human temporal lobes.

Assaf Tal1, Tiejun Zhao2,3, Claudiu Schirda4, Hoby P Hetherington4, Jullie W Pan4, Oded Gonen2.   

Abstract

1 H-MRSI is commonly performed with gradient phase encoding, due to its simplicity and minimal radio frequency (RF) heating (specific absorption rate). Its two well-known main problems-(i) "voxel bleed" due to the intrinsic point-spread function, and (ii) chemical shift displacement error (CSDE) when slice-selective RF pulses are used, which worsens with increasing volume of interest (VOI) size-have long become accepted as unavoidable. Both problems can be mitigated with Hadamard multislice RF encoding. This is demonstrated and quantified with numerical simulations, in a multislice phantom and in five healthy young adult volunteers at 3 T, targeting a 2-cm thick temporal lobe VOI through the bilateral hippocampus. This frequently targeted region (e.g. in epilepsy and Alzheimer's disease) is subject to strong, 1-2 ppm.cm-1 regional B0, susceptibility gradients that can dramatically reduce the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and water suppression effectiveness. The chemical shift imaging (CSI) sequence used a 3-ms Shinnar-Le Roux (SLR) 90° RF pulse, acquiring eight steps in the slice direction. The Hadamard sequence acquired two overlapping slices using the same SLR 90° pulses, under twofold stronger gradients that proportionally halved the CSDE. Both sequences used 2D 20 × 20 rosette spectroscopic imaging (RSI) for in-plane spatial localization and both used RF and gradient performance characteristics that are easily met by all modern MRI instruments. The results show that Hadamard spectroscopic imaging (HSI) suffered dramatically less signal bleed within the VOI compared with CSI (<1% vs. approximately 26% in simulations; and 5%-8% vs. >50%) in a phantom specifically designed to test these effects. The voxels' SNR per unit volume per unit time was also 40% higher for HSI. In a group of five healthy volunteers, we show that HSI with in-plane 2D-RSI facilitates fast, 3D multivoxel encoding at submilliliter spatial resolution, over the bilateral human hippocampus, in under 10 min, with negligible CSDE, spectral and spatial contamination and more than 6% improved SNR per unit time per unit volume.
© 2021 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Hadamard spectroscopic imaging; brain; hippocampus; magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging; rosette spectroscopic imaging

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33754420      PMCID: PMC8122085          DOI: 10.1002/nbm.4507

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  NMR Biomed        ISSN: 0952-3480            Impact factor:   4.478


  48 in total

1.  Optimizing the efficiency of high-field multivoxel spectroscopic imaging by multiplexing in space and time.

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2.  Automated spectral analysis III: application to in vivo proton MR spectroscopy and spectroscopic imaging.

Authors:  B J Soher; K Young; V Govindaraju; A A Maudsley
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  1998-12       Impact factor: 4.668

3.  Volumetric spectroscopic imaging with spiral-based k-space trajectories.

Authors:  E Adalsteinsson; P Irarrazabal; S Topp; C Meyer; A Macovski; D M Spielman
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  1998-06       Impact factor: 4.668

4.  An integrated program for amplitude-modulated RF pulse generation and re-mapping with shaped gradients.

Authors:  G B Matson
Journal:  Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  1994       Impact factor: 2.546

5.  Three-dimensional echo-planar MR spectroscopic imaging at short echo times in the human brain.

Authors:  S Posse; C DeCarli; D Le Bihan
Journal:  Radiology       Date:  1994-09       Impact factor: 11.105

6.  Three-dimensional Hadamard-encoded proton spectroscopic imaging in the human brain using time-cascaded pulses at 3 Tesla.

Authors:  Ouri Cohen; Assaf Tal; Oded Gonen
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2013-11-20       Impact factor: 4.668

7.  Improved spatial localization in magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging with two-dimensional PSF-Choice encoding.

Authors:  Shelley HuaLei Zhang; Stephan E Maier; Lawrence P Panych
Journal:  J Magn Reson       Date:  2018-03-03       Impact factor: 2.229

Review 8.  (1)H MR spectroscopy in epilepsy.

Authors:  Milan Hajek; Monika Dezortova; Pavel Krsek
Journal:  Eur J Radiol       Date:  2008-04-22       Impact factor: 3.528

9.  MR spectroscopic imaging at 3 T and outcomes in surgical epilepsy.

Authors:  Jullie W Pan; Arun Antony; Assaf Tal; Victor Yushmanov; Joanna Fong; Mark Richardson; Claud Schirda; Anto Bagic; Oded Gonen; Hoby P Hetherington
Journal:  NMR Biomed       Date:  2021-03-10       Impact factor: 4.478

10.  Density-weighted concentric rings k-space trajectory for 1 H magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging at 7 T.

Authors:  Mark Chiew; Wenwen Jiang; Brian Burns; Peder Larson; Adam Steel; Peter Jezzard; M Albert Thomas; Uzay E Emir
Journal:  NMR Biomed       Date:  2017-10-18       Impact factor: 4.044

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  1 in total

1.  MR spectroscopic imaging at 3 T and outcomes in surgical epilepsy.

Authors:  Jullie W Pan; Arun Antony; Assaf Tal; Victor Yushmanov; Joanna Fong; Mark Richardson; Claud Schirda; Anto Bagic; Oded Gonen; Hoby P Hetherington
Journal:  NMR Biomed       Date:  2021-03-10       Impact factor: 4.478

  1 in total

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