16:00 |
0634. |
kT-Points-Based
Inversion Pulse Design for Transmit-SENSE enabled MP-RAGE
Brain Imaging at 7T
M.A. Cloos1,2, N. Boulant1, M.
Luong2, G. Ferrand2, E. Giacomini1,
M-F. Hang1, C.J. Wiggins1, D. Le
Bihan1, and A. Amadon1
1CEA, DSV, I2BM, Neurospin, LRMN,
Gif-Sur-Yvette, Ile de france, France, 2CEA,
DSM, IRFU, Gif-Sur-Yvette, Ile de france, France
Among the advantages of the Transmit-SENSE method is the
ability to facilitate short low SAR excitation pulses
with excellent flip-angle homogeneity at high field. In
this framework, large tip angle pulses are of particular
interest as they could provide a viable alternative to
the SAR-demanding adiabatic solutions. In this abstract,
we demonstrate the kT-points method in the MP-RAGE
sequence for high-resolution T1-weighted brain imaging
at 7 Tesla, omitting adiabatic pulses by introducing the
kT-points-based inversion pulse design.
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16:12 |
0635. |
Tailored Excitation Using
Non-Linear B0-Shims
Qi Duan1, Peter van Gelderen1, and
Jeff H. Duyn1
1Advanced MRI section, LFMI, NINDS, National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States
This abstract proposes an alternative approach to
shorten multi-dimensional excitation by utilizing
non-linear spatial variations in the stationary (B0)
magnetic field during a B0-sensitive
excitation pulse. As initial demonstration, the method
was applied to 2D gradient echo (GE) MRI of human brain
at 7T. Using B0 shims with up to second order spatial
dependence, it is demonstrated that root-mean-squared
flip angle variation can be reduced from 20% to 11% with
RF pulse lengths that are practical for general GE
imaging applications without requiring parallel
excitation.
|
16:24 |
0636.
|
Four-Dimensional
Spectral-Spatial Pulse for Fat Saturation with Parallel
Excitation: Preliminary Results on 3T Scanners
Feng Zhao1, Jon-Fredrik Nielsen1,
and Douglas C. Noll1
1Biomedical Engineering, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States
Fat saturation techniques that use spectrally selective
pulses suffer from inaccurate excitation due to
inhomogeneous B0 or B1 maps. To solve this problem, wee
propose a 4D spectral-spatial pulse with parallel
excitation, which is demonstrated by preliminary 3T
data.
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16:36 |
0637.
|
Direct method for parallel
transmit pulse design by time-reversal of the small-tip
angle excitation
Kaveh Vahedipour1, N. Jon Shah1,2,
and Tony Jon Stöcker1
1Institue of Neuroscience and Medicine - 4,
Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich, Germany, 2JARA
- Faculty of Medicine, RWTH Aachen University, JARA,
Aachen, Germany
This abstract demonstrates that the spatio-temporal
symmetries fundamental to the Bloch equation and the
principle of reciprocity allow one to utilise MR signal
acquisition or simulation for small tip-angle pulse
design. Furthermore, it is demonstrated how the method
is intrinsically capable of parallel transmit as well as
how mitigation of static and high frequency field
inhomogeneities is intuitively performed. The
system-encoding matrix is never considered in theory or
algorithmically. A theoretical derivation is formulated
and proven in principle. It is further demonstrated that
the MRI experiment can be used directly as an analogue
computer for small tip-angle pulses.
|
16:48 |
0638.
|
Enhanced whole brain
excitation performance of parallel transmission with a
Z-encoding RF coil array at 7T
Xiaoping Wu1, Sebastian Schmitter1,
Gregor Adriany1, Edward J. Auerbach1,
Kamil Ugurbil1, and Pierre-Francois Van de
Moortele1
1CMRR, Radiology, University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, MN, United States
Multi-channel transmit B1 (B1+) manipulation techniques,
such as static B1 shimming and parallel transmission (pTX),
can be used to reduce the severe B1+ inhomogeneities
that arise at 7T and above. One of the fundamental
limits of multi-channel B1 manipulation is determined by
the spatial encoding capabilities of the utilized
multi-element RF coil, although different B1 methods,
e.g. static B1 shim vs. spoke trajectories, will not be
affected similarly by a given RF coil geometry. In a
previous study it has been shown that distributing
individual elements of a 7T head array coil in two rings
along Z direction provided better RF efficiency than a
standard single ring array when applying static B1
shimming over a large brain area. The goal of the
current study was to determine, by comparing two
transceiver arrays, whether, and to what extent, the use
of kT points, a promising approach recently proposed to
achieve homogeneous excitation over the whole brain at
7T, would also benefit from RF coil elements distributed
along the Z axis.
|
17:00 |
0639. |
Revisiting RF Feedback
Pulses: Encoding Image Contrast during Excitation
Tony Stöcker1, Kaveh Vahedipour1,
and N. Jon Shah1,2
1Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine - 4,
Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich, Germany, 2JARA
- Faculty of Medicine, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen,
Germany
This work discusses multidimensional RF feedback pulses
(FBP), which copy the received MRI signal(s) back to the
RF transmit channel(s), taking advantage of transmit and
receive reciprocity. Spatially selective FBP, which are
accompanied by suitable gradient waveforms, have the
property to recursively enhance image contrast, which is
promising in several applications. The paper presents a
theoretical description of FBP in the context of the
small tip angle approximation, first experimental
results, and numerical simulations of multiple
transceivers FBP (parallel transmit), which are
promising to shorten the pulse length.
|
17:12 |
0640.
|
Selective Labeling of
Moving Spins Using Parallel 3D Spatially Selective
Excitation
Johannes T. Schneider1,2, Wolfgang Ruhm1,
Sarah R. Herrmann1, Martin Haas2,
Jürgen Hennig2, and Peter Ullmann1
1Bruker BioSpin MRI GmbH, Ettlingen, Germany, 2Department
of Radiology, Medical Physics, University Medical Center
Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
This study presents the use of parallel excitation (PEX)
for selective labeling of moving spins. In a multi-tube
phantom the spins of one particular tube were labeled by
3D spatially-selective saturation in a short
tube-segment. The difference to a control image acquired
without labeling depicts the labeled tube’s moving spins
exclusively thus demonstrating the largely sufficient
PEX performance for this type of applications. With the
same technique, the course and mixing properties of
different flow components were observed in a “Y”-shaped
tube-junction. Compared to other labeling techniques,
3D-PEX provides an unprecedented grade of flexibility
and specificity regarding the labeling volume.
|
17:24 |
0641.
|
High B1 efficiency with
uniform image contrast in 3D FFE and TSE at 7T.
Irene Maria Louise van Kalleveen1, Vincent O.
Boer1, Peter Luijten1, and Dennis
W.J. Klomp1
1Radiology, UMC Utrecht, Utrecht, Utrecht,
Netherlands
In high field clinical MRI the B1 field
is limited and inhomogeneous, while RF power deposition
is high. Surface coils can improve the B1 efficiency,
however the B1 field
becomes even more inhomogeneous. As the inhomogeneity is
mainly dominant in one dimensional, we designed a 1D
compensating RF pulse derived from a B1 map.
In combination with slab selective gradients the RF
pulse will provide a uniform flip angle as demonstrated
by 3D FFE and 3D TSE in the human breast.
|
17:36 |
0642. |
Local SAR reduction in
multi-slice pTx via “SAR hopping” between excitations
Bastien Guerin1, Elar Adalsteinsson2,3,
and Lawrence L. Wald1,3
1Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging,
Dept. of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital,
Charlestown, MA, United States, 2Dept
of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA,
United States, 3Harvard-MIT
Division of Health Sciences Technology, Cambridge, MA,
United States
The time scale of RF transmission being much smaller
than the time scale of temperature changes, only SAR
averaged over several pulses needs to be constrained,
not the SAR of individual pulses. In this work, we
propose a multislice excitation strategy using pulses
with minimally overlapping SAR distributions and jointly
optimized so as to minimize their average local SAR.
This strategy is not affected by ghosting since a given
slice is always excited by the same pulse. It allows
reduction of pulse-averaged local SAR by 35% for RF
shimming and pTx arrays with two rows compared to pulses
designed independently.
|
17:48 |
0643. |
(RATE) Rapid MRI
Acquisition using Tailored Signal Excitation modules: A
k-space aliasing method to accelerate MRI scans
Arjun Arunachalam1, and Kamlesh Pawar1
1Electrical Engineering, Indian Institute of
Technology Bombay, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
A new MRI acceleration technique that relies on the
concept of k-space aliasing is introduced. K-space
signal can either have a narrow spectrum because they
come from features that are non-dynamic or because they
come from structures that have weak signal magnitude. In
the latter case, the temporal spectrum may not be narrow
but only a portion of it is relevant as the rest remains
buried under noise. The proposed method exploited these
properties by using tailored signal excitation modules
consisting of RF pulses and gradients to overlap
distinct k-space points that are then resolved through
Fourier transformation in time.
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