## Abstract ## Purpose To compare two fat suppression techniques of spectrally‐selective inversion pulse (spectral presaturation with inversion recovery—SPIR) and spectral‐spatial excitation pulse of water excitation (WE) for contrast‐enhanced MR imaging of the breast. ## Materials and Methods F
Enhanced Suppression of Residual Water in a “270” WET Sequence
✍ Scribed by Shanmin Zhang; Xianbin Yang; David G Gorenstein
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 80 KB
- Volume
- 143
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1090-7807
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
In certain water suppression experiments, the residual water, which comes from a region away from the center of the RF coil and experiences a much smaller flip angle than the designed one, may appear. The residual water in the WET sequence can be reduced significantly by using a composite 90(x)( degrees )90(y)( degrees )90(-x)( degrees )90(-y)( degrees ) pulse, which de-excites molecules experiencing a small flip angle. The composite pulse, however, has two null excitation points near on resonance, causing a severe loss of spectrum intensity and baseline distortion toward the null points. Since the residual water experiences a very small flip angle, it can be treated as a linear spin system; i.e., the intensity of the residual water is proportional to the pulse strength and width. Based on this principle, the residual water can be reduced dramatically by replacing the 90 degrees pulse in the "270" WET sequence with a 270 degrees pulse for one out of every four scans, without noticeable loss of intensity and baseline distortion.
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was evaluated for in vivo brain proton surface coil NMR spectroscopy. The studies were performed on cat brain using surface coils at 4.7 T. The sequence produced brain spectra with adequate water suppression, and a broader excitation profile than sequences which form spin echoes using 133 1 pulses (