13:30 |
0335.
|
Fast B1-insensitive T2
relaxometry of the human brain at high to ultra-high fields
Rahel Heule1, Peter Bär2,
Christian Mirkes3,4, Klaus Scheffler3,4,
Siegfried Trattnig2, and Oliver Bieri1
1Division of Radiological Physics, Department
of Radiology, University of Basel Hospital, Basel,
Switzerland, 2MR
Centre of Excellence, Department of Biomedical Imaging
and Image-guided Therapy, Medical University of Vienna,
Vienna, Austria, 3MRC
Department, Max Planck Institute for Biological
Cybernetics, Tübingen, Germany, 4Department
of Biomedical Magnetic Resonance, University of Tübingen,
Tübingen, Germany
Quantitative imaging at high to ultra-high fields
suffers from prominent B1 field inhomogeneities that
affect quantification accuracy. Recently, a 3D triple
echo steady-state (TESS) approach has been presented
that offers fast B1-insensitive T2 quantification. In
this work, the sensitivity to subject motion of 3D-TESS
is reduced by investigating a rapid 2D technique suited
for brain applications. The feasibility and reliability
of 2D TESS-T2 relaxometry is demonstrated in human brain
scans at high (3 T) and ultra-high (7 T and 9.4 T)
fields. The results accentuate the potential of TESS-T2
to act as valuable measure for the detection of brain
tissue alterations.
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13:42 |
0336. |
Quantitative MR imaging
method
Bruno Madore1, Cheng-Chieh Cheng2,
and Chang-Sheng Mei1
1Department of Radiology, Harvard Medical
School, Brigham and Womens' Hospital, Boston, MA, United
States, 2Department
of Electrical Engineering, National Taiwan University,
Taipei, Taiwan
From 3D data acquired over no more than a few minutes,
the present method aims to evaluate all of the main
physical MR parameters: T1, T2, T2*, M0, B0 and B1. A
single pulse sequence is employed, and the various MR
parameters can be evaluated one at a time and/or through
linear equations, as opposed to numerically solving
larger and non-linear systems of equations involving
many or all parameters at once. As few as only two MR
scans may be acquired, using different nominal
user-input flips angles and/or different repetition
times. Simulated and phantom results are presented.
|
13:54 |
0337.
|
An Improved Gradient Echo
Myelin Water Imaging using a Frequency Offset Model and
Early Echoes
Yoonho Nam1, Jongho Lee2, Dosik
Hwang1, and Dong-Hyun Kim1
1Department of Electrical and Electronic
Engineering, Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea, 2Department
of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, United States
Myelin water imaging has been proposed as a potential
biomarker for demyelinating diseases. In this study, we
demonstrated that the multi-component model with
frequency offsets offers substantially reliable MWF
results that are less affected by the number of echoes
used in the analysis. Additionally, we revealed that the
MWF map generated from early echoes is less sensitive to
B0 field inhomogeneity and, hence, provides wider brain
coverage. Lastly, we performed a test-retest scan and
demonstrated that the frequency offset model with early
echoes provides more reproducible results.
|
14:06 |
0338.
|
The Phase and Magnetization
Transfer Characteristics of a Novel Myelin Water Imaging
Method (ViSTa)
Hyo Min Lee1,2, Daeun Kim1, Sung
Suk Oh1, Joon Yul Choi1, Se-Hong
Oh1, and Jongho Lee1
1Radiology, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 2Bioengineering,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United
States
The signal characteristics of a novel myelin water
imaging method, direct visualization of short transverse
relaxation time component (ViSTa), have been explored.
The results show that the phase evolution and
magnetization transfer effects of ViSTa match well with
those of myelin water and are substantially different
from those of GRE. These results, in addition to short
T2* characteristics of ViSTa, further support the origin
of ViSTa signal to myelin water.
|
14:18 |
0339. |
An algorithm for fast and
accurate T2* mapping
based on Auto-Regression on Linear Operations (ARLO) of data
Mengchao Pei1,2, Thanh D. Nguyen3,
Nanda D. Thimmappa3, Carlo Salustri3,
Fang Dong2, Mitchell A. Cooper4,
Jianqi Li5, Martin Prince3, and Yi
Wang3
1East China Normal University, Shanghai,
Shanghai, China, 2Yifu
Inc, Jiaxing, Zhejiang, China, 3Radiology,
Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, United
States, 4Cornell
University, Ithaca, NY, United States, 5East
China Normal University, Shanghai, China
We propose a novel fast and accurate method for
calculating transverse relaxation times called Auto
Regression on Linear Operations (ARLO). T2*mapping
using simulated and in vivo data showed ARLO delivered
comparable accuracy compared to the non-linear least
squares based Levenberg-Marquardt (LM) algorithm and
better accuracy for lower SNR and shorter T2* compared
to the Log-Linear (LL) algorithm. ARLO is approximately
100 and 10 times faster than LM and LL, respectively,
enabling rapid whole-organ T2* mapping.
|
14:30 |
0340.
|
Automatic Brain
Segmentation using Fractional Signal Modelling of a Multiple
Flip-Angle Spoiled Gradient-Recalled Echo Acquisition
André Ahlgren1, Ronnie Wirestam1,
Freddy Ståhlberg1,2, and Linda Knutsson1
1Department of Medical Radiation Physics,
Lund University, Lund, Sweden, 2Department
of Diagnostic Radiology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden
Brain segmentation based on multi-component modelling of
quantitative MRI data has yielded great interest
recently. Those methods are attractive due to their
simplicity in modelling and processing. In this work, we
present a novel method to segment gray matter, white
matter, and cerebrospinal fluid, based on a spoiled
gradient-recalled echo (SPGR) sequence acquired with
varying flip angles (VFA). The method, dubbed ‘SPGR-SEG’,
yielded robust and realistic segmentation maps in good
agreement with a reference method based on inversion
recovery data.
|
14:42 |
0341. |
Maximizing Tissue Contrast
in MRI Using RAFFn Preparation with SWIFT and Spin Echo
Readouts
Timo Liimatainen1, Djaudat Idiyatullin2,
Jinjin Zhang2, Hanne Hakkarainen1,
Silvia Mangia2, Michael Garwood2,
and Shalom Michaeli2
1A.I.Virtanen Institute, University of
Eastern Finland, Kuopio, FI, Finland, 2Center
for Magnetic Resonance Research, University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States
The general procedure of generating tissue contrast
which is characterized predominantly by slow motion by
altering steady state in SWIFT with RAFFn preparation
pulses is described. It is shown that high rotating
frame relaxation contrasts obtained with RAFFn provide
enhanced sensitivity to slow motion in tissue and is
associated with myelin in the brain.
|
14:54 |
0342. |
Robust adiabatic T2
preparation for fast whole brain spiral myelin water imaging
at 3 Tesla
Thanh D. Nguyen1, Kofi Deh1,
Ashish Raj1, Martin Prince1, Yi
Wang1, and Susan A. Gauthier2
1Radiology, Weill Cornell Medical College,
New York, NY, United States, 2Neurology
and Neuroscience, Weill Cornell Medical College, New
York, NY, United States
An adiabatic T2prep design based on the modified BIR-4
pulse is proposed for multicomponent T2 relaxometry of
the brain at 3T. When compared to the conventional
composite refocusing T2prep, our results show that the
proposed BIR-4 design provides more accurate T2
weighting against increased field inhomogeneities at 3T,
enabling fast and reliable whole brain myelin water
mapping in 10 minutes.
|
15:06 |
0343.
|
Multi-site, multi-vendor
reproducibility of R2* relaxometry on an SPIO phantom at
1.5T and 3T
Diego Hernando1, Ihab Kamel2, Li
Pan3, Ivan Pedrosa4,5, Shreyas
Vasanawala6, Takeshi Yokoo4,5,
Qing Yuan4, and Scott B. Reeder1,7
1Radiology, University of Wisconsin-Madison,
Madison, WI, United States, 2Radiology,
Johns Hopkins University, MD, United States, 3Corporate
Technology, Siemens Corporation, Baltimore, MD, United
States, 4Radiology,
UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, United
States, 5Advanced
Imaging Research Center, UT Southwestern Medical Center,
Dallas, TX, United States, 6Radiology,
Stanford University, CA, United States, 7Medicine,
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United
States
Recently developed R2* relaxometry techniques may enable
rapid, accurate and robust liver iron quantification.
However, the reproducibility of these techniques across
multiple sites and MRI platforms has not been
established, precluding their widespread dissemination.
In this work, we studied the reproducibility of R2*
mapping on a phantom with different iron concentrations,
at four sites and on eight different scanning platforms
including 1.5T and 3T. Results demonstrate excellent
reproducibility across sites and platforms at each field
strength over a wide range of R2* values.
|
15:18 |
0344. |
T1 Measurement
of the Myelin Water Fraction
Peter van Gelderen1, Xu Jiang1,
Jacco A de Zwart1, and Jeff H Duyn1
1AMRI, LFMI, NINDS, National Institutes of
Health, Bethesda, MD, United States
To investigate the possibility of using T1 contrast
to selectively image myelin water, inversion-recovery
prepared multi-gradient-echo imaging was performed on
human subjects at 7T. Multi-component fitting of the T2*
decay curve allowed distinguishing between water inside
and outside the myelin sheath and quantifying individual
T1-decay time constants. When properly
accounting for imperfect inversion efficiency, no
substantial difference between apparent T1 of
the different compartments was found, suggesting a
relatively rapid exchange of water within and outside
the myelin sheath.
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