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A multislice gradient echo pulse sequence for CEST imaging

✍ Scribed by W. Thomas Dixon; Ileana Hancu; S. James Ratnakar; A. Dean Sherry; Robert E. Lenkinski; David C. Alsop


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
148 KB
Volume
63
Category
Article
ISSN
0740-3194

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Chemical exchange–dependent saturation transfer and paramagnetic chemical exchange–dependent saturation transfer are agent‐mediated contrast mechanisms that depend on saturating spins at the resonant frequency of the exchangeable protons on the agent, thereby indirectly saturating the bulk water. In general, longer saturating pulses produce stronger chemical and paramagnetic exchange–dependent saturation transfer effects, with returns diminishing for pulses longer than T~1~. This could make imaging slow, so one approach to chemical exchange–dependent saturation transfer imaging has been to follow a long, frequency‐selective saturation period by a fast imaging method. A new approach is to insert a short frequency‐selective saturation pulse before each spatially selective observation pulse in a standard, two‐dimensional, gradient‐echo pulse sequence. Being much less than T~1~ apart, the saturation pulses have a cumulative effect. Interleaved, multislice imaging is straightforward. Observation pulses directed at one slice did not produce observable, unintended chemical exchange–dependent saturation transfer effects in another slice. Pulse repetition time and signal‐to noise ratio increase in the normal way as more slices are imaged simultaneously. Magn Reson Med, 2010. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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