Diffusion Acquisition
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Monday 7 May 2012
Plenary Hall  16:30 - 18:30 Moderators: Roland Bammer, Jennifer A. McNab

16:30 0112.   
Elimination of DWI signal dropouts using blipped gradients for dynamic restoration of gradient moment
Kazim Gumus1, Benedikt Poser1, Brian Keating1, Brian Armstrong2, Julian Maclaren3, Thomas Prieto4, Oliver Speck5, Maxim Zaitsev6, and Thomas Ernst1
1John A. Burns School of Medicine, U. of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI, United States, 2Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer, U. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, United States, 3Dept. of Radiology, University Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany, 4Neurology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Wauwatosa, WI, United States, 5Dept. Biomedical Magnetic Resonance, Otto-von-Guericke-University, Magdeburg, Germany, 6Dept. of Diagnostic Radiology, University Hospital Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany

 
Intra-scan head motion causes signal dropouts in DWI. A new method is presented to eliminate such artifacts. We used a Moiré-Phase-Target based tracking system to measure head motion between excitation and acquisition. Knowing also the timing and amplitudes of gradients, we determined the motion-induced residual gradient moment (M) and restored the gradient balance prior to readout by applying a blip gradient of moment -M. The method was tested on two volunteers who performed intentional head movements. Gradient moment correction successfully eliminated signal dropouts compared to scans without correction. This method should be feasible on most modern scanner platforms.

 
16:42 0113.   EPI navigator based prospective motion correction technique for diffusion neuroimaging.
Himanshu Bhat1, M. Dylan Tisdall2, Andre Jan Willem van der Kouwe2, Thorsten Feiweier3, and Keith Heberlein1
1Siemens Medical Solutions USA Inc., Charlestown, MA, United States, 2A. A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown, MA, United States, 3Siemens Healthcare, Erlangen, Germany

 
In this work we developed a novel prospective motion correction method for multi-slice single shot diffusion weighted EPI. Rigid body navigation is achieved using non diffusion encoded low resolution single shot EPI images as motion navigators during the diffusion scan. Two approaches: integrated and interleaved are described. The proposed methods work independent of the b-value used and do not need retrospective adjustment of the b-matrix. The compromise for the integrated method is the TE and TR increase and the corresponding signal decrease while the interleaved method requires only a small (~10%) increase in minimum TR.

 
16:54 0114.   MR-based and Optical Prospective Motion Correction for High Resolution DWI with RS-EPI
Murat Aksoy1, Melvyn Ooi1, Samantha J Holdsworth1, Rafael O'Halloran1, and Roland Bammer1
1Center for Quantitative Neuroimaging, Department of Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States

 
Two prospective motion correction techniques for high resolution diffusion-weighted imaging are compared for readout-segmented (RS) EPI. The first uses 3D registration of low resolution navigator images and the second uses a camera mounted in the scanner bore to correct for motion between k-space segments. Results show that both techniques are effective in eliminating head motion between blinds of the RS-EPI readout, however, optical tracking has advantages because it needs less rescanning, is not vulnerable to intra-volume motion and optically obtained motion estimates are robust to ghosting artifacts.

 
17:06 0115.   In Vivo Correction of Non-Linear Phase Patterns for Diffusion-Weighted FSE Imaging Using Tailored RF Excitation Pulses
Rita G. Nunes1,2, Shaihan J. Malik2, and Joseph V. Hajnal2
1Institute of Biophysics and Biomedical Engineering, Faculty of Sciences, University of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal, 2Robert Steiner MRI Unit, Imaging Sciences Department, MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Hammersmith Hospital, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom

 
Unlike Echo-planar imaging, single-shot fast spin-echo is insensitive to field inhomogeneities but it requires precise control of the phase of the magnetization prior to the start of the refocusing train (CPMG condition). Due to motion, this is very difficult to achieve when diffusion-weighting is applied in vivo. Previously it has been shown that linear phase errors can be measured and corrected for in real time using gradients. The remaining non-linear phase modulations can be prospectively corrected using tailored RF excitation pulses as demonstrated on phantoms. Here the method is further developed and shown to be effective for in vivo imaging.

 
17:18 0116.
Reduction of diffusion-weighted readout-segmented EPI scan time using a blipped-CAIPI modification
Robert Frost1, David A. Porter2, Gwenaelle Douaud1, Peter Jezzard1, and Karla L. Miller1
1FMRIB Centre, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, 2Healthcare Sector, Siemens AG, Erlangen, Germany

 
Readout-segmented EPI (rs-EPI) for diffusion imaging reduces distortion and T2* blurring and enables higher resolution relative to single-shot EPI (ss-EPI). However, the long scan times caused by segmenting the acquisition of k-space limit the number of slices and/or diffusion directions. A blipped-CAIPI multiband modification to rs-EPI has the potential to address the scan time issue and is demonstrated here with slice acceleration factor two. Trace-weighted images with 0.9x0.9x4mm resolution acquired in clinically relevant scan times are presented. Diffusion tractography is compared from data acquired at 2 and 1.5mm isotropic resolution for rs- and ss-EPI.

 
17:30 0117.   
2D Navigated 3D Multi-Slab DWI at 1.3 mm Isotropic Resolution
Mathias Engström1, Roland Bammer2, and Stefan Skare1
1Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden, 2Radiological Sciences Laboratory, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, United States

 
In this work we present a method to do diffusion weighted imaging at 1.3 mm isotropic resolution with full brain coverage, using multi-slab multi-echo spin echo-EPI. We also suggest a method on how to correct for diffusion gradient induced phase for multi-slab acquisitions along with slab profile intensity optimization.

 
17:42 0118.   3D Diffusion-Weighted MRI with SSFP: Rigid- and non-Rigid-Body Phase Correction
Rafael O'Halloran1, Murat Aksoy1, and Roland Bammer1
1Radiology, Stanford Universtiy, Stanford, CA, United States

 
The main obstacle to high-resolution 3D diffusion-weighted MRI is the motion-induced phase error. In this work the phase error is addressed with a hybrid 3D navigator approach that corrects phase induced by rigid-body motion for every shot and phase induced by repeatable non-rigid-body pulsation over the cardiac cycle. This phase correction method was shown to mitigate signal dropouts caused by shot-to-shot phase inconsistencies compared to a standard gridding reconstruction in healthy volunteers. The 3D SSFP approach was also compared to 2D DW-EPI and shown to have similar diffusion contrast.

 
17:54 0119.   'Turboprop+': Enhanced Turboprop DWI with a new phase correction
Chu-Yu Lee1,2, Zhiqiang Li3, James G. Pipe2, and Josef P. Debbins1,2
1Electrical Engineering, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, United States, 2Neuroimaging Research, Barrow Neurological Institute, Phoenix, AZ, United States,3MR engineering, GE Healthcare, Waukesha, WI, United States

 
Compared with conventional (multishot FSE) DW-PROPELLER, Turboprop gives increased sampling efficiency, a wider self-navigated region, and reduced specific absorption rate (SAR) by incorporating the GRASE readout to collect gradient echoes around the primary spin-echo. However, phase errors using the GRASE readout, which are exacerbated with preceding large diffusion gradients, induce image artifacts in Turboprop. To mitigate this issue, X-prop and Steer-prop techniques have been proposed, which keep the gradient echoes encoded into separate blades. In this work, we introduced a method to correct the off-resonance phase in Turboprop, called ¡¥Turboprop+¡¦. The results suggest that Turboprop+ has greater immunity to the artifacts from off-resonance phase, compared with X-prop.

 
18:06 0120.   Water-fat separation in diffusion-weighted MRI using an EPI-IDEAL approach
Jedrzej Burakiewicz1, Geoffrey David Charles-Edwards1,2, Vicky Goh1,2, and Tobias Schaeffter1
1King's College London, London, United Kingdom, 2Guy's and St. Thomas' NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom

 
Effective fat suppression can significantly extend the acquisition time in EPI-based diffusion MRI outside the brain. We present a single-shot diffusion-weighted EPI in combination with IDEAL method for fat-water sepa-ration utilising the inherent signal averaging from the chemical shift encoding. We utilise a B0 map acquired without diffusion weighting to demodulate images at higher b-values before reconstruction to improve the wa-ter-fat separation. This technique was tested in phantom and healthy volunteers.

 
18:18 0121.   Multiple echo diffusion tensor acquisition technique (MEDITATE) implementation on 3T clinical scanner
Steven Baete1, Gene Cho1,2, and Eric E Sigmund1
1Center for Biomedical Imaging, Dept. of Radiology, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York, NY, United States, 2Sackler Institute of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, NYU School of Medicine, New York, NY, United States

 
This abstract describes the implementation of a rapid method to acquire a full diffusion tensor in on a clinical scanner. The method is named the 3D multiple modulation multiple echo diffusion tensor acquisition technique (MEDITATE). MEDITATE employs four rf-pulses and a pattern of diffusion gradients on three gradient axes to encode a train of 17 echoes with different diffusion weightings and directions. The resulting diffusion weighted signals can be used to estimate DTI parameters as demonstrated in a fibrous phantom. This sequence may be useful in clinical applications requiring time-sensitive acquisition of DTI parameters such as dynamical DTI in muscle.