Macromolecules contribute broad "background" resonances to the 1 H NMR brain spectra at short echo times. The application of long echo times is the most widely used method for removing these resonances. Here, it is demonstrated that these background resonances may be suppressed at short echo times u
1H Spectroscopy without Solvent Suppression: Characterization of Signal Modulations at Short Echo Times
β Scribed by David B. Clayton; Mark A. Elliott; John S. Leigh; Robert E. Lenkinski
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 162 KB
- Volume
- 153
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1090-7807
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β¦ Synopsis
While most proton (
1 H) spectra acquired in vivo utilize selective suppression of the solvent signal for more sensitive detection of signals from the dilute metabolites, recent reports have demonstrated the feasibility and advantages of collecting in vivo data without solvent attenuation. When these acquisitions are performed at short echo times, the presence of frequency modulations of the water resonance may become an obstacle to the identification and quantitation of metabolite resonances. The present report addresses the characteristics, origin, and elimination of these sidebands. Sideband amplitudes were measured as a function of delay time between gradient pulse and data collection, as a function of gradient pulse amplitude, and as a function of spatial location of the sample for each of the three orthogonal gradient sets. Acoustic acquisitions were performed to demonstrate the correlation between mechanical vibration resonances and the frequencies of MR sidebands. A mathematical framework is developed and compared with the experimental results. This derivation is based on the theory that these frequency modulations are induced by magnetic field fluctuations generated by the transient oscillations of gradient coils.
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## Abstract ## Purpose: To examine the precision of glutamate detection using a very short echo time (TE) phase rotation STEAM (PRβSTEAM) sequence. ## Materials and Methods: Spectrosopic data were acquired from the anterior cingulate gyrus in nine healthy adults using 6.5βmsec TE PRβSTEAM, 40βms