## Abstract Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (^1^H MRSI) is a useful technique for measuring metabolite levels in vivo, with Choline (Cho), Creatine (Cre), and __N__‐Acetyl‐Aspartate (NAA) being the most prominent MRS‐detectable brain biochemicals. ^1^H MRSI at very high fields, such
Fat suppression for 1H MRSI at 7T using spectrally selective adiabatic inversion recovery
✍ Scribed by Priti Balchandani; Daniel Spielman
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 426 KB
- Volume
- 59
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0740-3194
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (^1^H MRSI) at 7T offers many advantages, including increased SNR and spectral resolution. However, technical difficulties associated with operating at high fields, such as increased B~1~ and B~0~ inhomogeneity, severe chemical shift localization error, and converging T~1~ values, make the suppression of the broad lipid peaks which can obscure targeted metabolite signals, particularly challenging. Conventional short tau inversion recovery can successfully suppress fat without restricting the selected volume, but only with significant metabolite signal loss. In this work, we have designed two new pulses for frequency‐selective inversion recovery that achieve B~1~‐insensitive fat suppression without degrading the signal from the major metabolites of interest. The first is a spectrally selective adiabatic pulse to be used in a volumetric ^1^H MRSI sequence and the second is a spatial‐spectral adiabatic pulse geared toward multi‐slice ^1^H MRSI. Partial interior volume selection may be used in addition to the pulses, to exclude areas with severe B~0~ inhomogeneity. Some differences in the spectral profile as well as degree of suppression make each pulse valuable for different applications. 7T phantom and in vivo data show that both pulses significantly suppress fat, while leaving most of the metabolite signal intact. Magn Reson Med 59:980–988, 2008. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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## Abstract The selective suppression of fat using chemical shift selective (CHESS) sinc, gaussian presaturation, or binomial radiofrequency pulses are widely implemented techniques in magnetic resonance imaging. For applications wherein transmitter coils that generate inhomogeneous magnetic (B~1~)