10:30 |
|
Introduction
Hans-Peter Fautz |
|
|
|
10:54 |
236. |
Fast 2D
B1 Mapping by K-Space Processing of Tagging Patterns
Wayne R. Dannels1,
Andrew J. Wheaton1
1Toshiba
Medical Research Institute, Mayfield Village, OH, United
States
Measuring B1 transmit fields
in vivo has importance in areas such as high field imaging,
parallel transmission design, and quantitative imaging. A
new method of acquisition and data analysis is presented for
generating 2D B1 maps in vivo in as little as one TR. In
this method saturation tag lines are applied before rapid
imaging, tag lines are separated from the underlying image
with k-space processing, and RF angles are computed from the
tagging efficiency ratio. |
|
|
|
11:06 |
237. |
Improved Phase-Based Adiabatic B1 Mapping
Franciszek Hennel1, Sascha Köhler1
1Bruker BioSpin MRI,
Ettlingen, Germany
A method for the mapping
of the radio-frequency transmission field is proposed
that derives B1 values from the phase of the signal. The
sequence consists of a block pulse to produce a
B1-dependent nutation, followed by an inverse adiabatic
half passage (IAFP) that converts the nutation phase to
signal phase. Two ways to compensate the undesired
dephasing caused by the IAFP are proposed: a rewinder RF
pulse, or a matched adiabatic echo. The method provides
an increased dynamic range compared to known phase-based
B1-mapping sequences.
|
|
|
|
11:18 |
238. |
Flip
Angle Taxonomy: Measuring Transmit (B1) Profile Distribution
Without Imaging
Roman Fleysher1,
Lazar Fleysher1, Joel A. Tang2, Daniel
Sodickson1
1Radiology,
New York University, School of Medicine, New York, United
States; 2Chemistry, New York University, New
York, United States
A method of measuring
transmit (micro-) coil profile (B1) distribution is
presented. In as much as it does not use spatial encoding,
it reaches fine resolution in B1 at very high
signal-to-noise ratios. The procedure can be used to
alleviate systematic errors in spectroscopic data analysis
caused by transmit field non-uniformity or can be employed
for a quick evaluation of transmit (micro-) coil
performance. |
|
|
|
11:30 |
239. |
Permittivity Determination Via Phantom and in Vivo B1
Mapping
Ulrich Katscher1,
Philipp Karkowski1, Christian Findeklee1,
Tobias Voigt2
1Philips Research
Europe, Hamburg, Germany; 2Institute of
Biomedical Engineering, University of Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe,
Germany
Tissue permittivity might
serve as diagnostic parameter, e.g., for oncology. However,
the diagnostic use of the permittivity is significantly
hampered by the lack of suitable methods to determine the
permittivity in vivo. A possible approach for the
determination of permittivity in vivo is given by analyzing
the B1 map in the framework of standard MRI, called
"Electric Properties Tomography" (EPT). Hitherto, studies
were focussed on the ability of EPT to reconstruct the
electric conductivity and local SAR. This study demonstrates
the ability of EPT to determine the permittivity via
numerous phantom and in vivo experiments. |
|
|
|
11:42 |
240. |
Simultaneous 3D B1 and T1 Mapping Using the New Method of
Slopes (MoS)
Sofia Chavez1,
Greg Stanisz1,2
1Imaging Research,
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;
2Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
A new 3D method for
simultaneous B1 and T1 mapping is presented. It relies on
the quasi-linear relationship between the measured SPGR
signal and nominal flip angle near the origin and near the
signal null. The B1 mapping estimation is similar to that
already existing in the literature with a more practical
implementation requiring flip angles < 180° which are
readily available on most scanners. The B1 mapping data with
an additional acquisition of the SPGR signal at a low flip
angle allows for the proposed T1 mapping. MoS yields
accurate T1 values (within 10% of IR esimates) for an
entire brain volume in ~12 min. |
|
|
|
11:54 |
241. |
Comparison Between RF Spoiling Schemes in the Actual
Flip-Angle Imaging (AFI) Sequence for Fast B1
Mapping
Vasily L. Yarnykh1
1Department of
Radiology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United
States
The Actual Flip-angle Imaging
(AFI) method allows fast B1 mapping based on the spoiled
steady-state principle. The combination of diffusion-based
gradient and RF spoiling mechanisms was recently shown to
considerably improve accuracy of this method. Two RF
spoiling techniques were proposed for AFI in the literature:
a standard phase incrementing scheme with a constant value
of the phase increment and a modified scheme with two
intermittently applied phase increments dependent on the
ratio n=TR2/TR1. This study compares the spoiling behavior
of the AFI sequence and accuracy of B1 measurements between
the above RF spoiling schemes. |
|
|
|
12:06 |
242. |
SVD Based
Calibration of Transmit Arrays
David
Otto Brunner1, Klaas Paul Pruessmann1
1Institute for Biomedical
Engineering, University and ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Using transmit-receive arrays
the acquisition of transmit and receive sensitivities are
both of crucial importance but there are also great
difficulties involved in bootstrapping such a process. In
regions of low excitation, the receive sensitivities cannot
be estimated correctly, leading to strong noise enhancement
in the reconstructed images as well as in the transmit
calibration data. This noise then propagates into the
calculated transmit profiles hindering transmit calibration.
In this work we present an acquisition and reconstruction
technique that solves this entangled problem and allows
finding concomitantly the signal optimal global RF shims and
local receive channel combinations. |
|
|
|
12:18 |
243. |
RF Field
Profiling Through Element Design for High Field Volume Coils
Can Akgun1,
Lance DelaBarre1, Carl J. Snyder1,
Gregor Adriany1, Anand Gopinath2,
Kamil Ugurbil1, John Thomas Vaughan1
1University of
Minnesota-Center for Magnetic Resonance Research,
Minneapolis, MN, United States; 2University of
Minnesota-Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering,
Minneapolis, MN, United States
Multi-channel volume coils
can be comprised of an array of transmission line elements
operated as independent coils in multiple-channel transmit
and receive configurations. In these designs, microstrip
transmission elements have been implemented as magnetic
field propagating elements. However, at high fields, RF
in-homogeneities and inefficiencies require the optimization
of these elements. In this study, two different microstrip
designs with varying impedance lines; one producing peak B1+
in the center and the other extending usable B1+ along the
coil are investigated. Simulation and image results for
8-channel volume coils incorporating these element designs
were obtained using a phantom at 7T. |
|
|
|
|