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Sodium 3-D MRI of the human torso using a volume coil

✍ Scribed by Günter Steidle; Hansjörg Graf; Fritz Schick


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2004
Tongue
English
Weight
527 KB
Volume
22
Category
Article
ISSN
0730-725X

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✦ Synopsis


Sodium MR imaging is considered to provide clinically important information about the human body that is not achievable by hydrogen-based approaches. However, due to the low natural abundance in biological tissues, sodium signals usually lead to low spatial resolution, low SNR, and long acquisition times compared to conventional 1H imaging, even using well-adapted surface coils. For our study, a volume coil was designed with nearly homogeneous excitation/receive characteristics and a suitable geometry fitting the human torso. A sufficient penetration throughout the entire thorax, abdomen, or pelvis is provided allowing for sodium imaging of the kidneys, the liver with gall bladder, or the myocardium. All measurements were performed on a 1.5 T whole body scanner using a spoiled 3-D gradient echo sequence. Imaging parameters TE, TR, and readout bandwidth were optimized for sensitive recording of the sodium component with slow transverse relaxation. Nonselective RF excitation pulses with a duration of 2.5 ms and rectangular shape were applied to avoid SAR problems. Narrow receiver bandwidth and excitation near the Ernst angle provided clinically practicable examinations with measuring times of less than 15 min at a spatial resolution of 8 x 8 x 8 mm3. Under these conditions, SNR of 11 for the kidneys and vertebral disks, 9 for the spinal canal, and 6 for the liver was achieved. A special 3-D spin echo sequence was used to determine T2, times which resulted to 15.3 +/- 1.1 ms for liver, 27.7 +/- 7.2 ms for kidneys, and 24.0 +/- 4.7 ms for the content of the spinal canal.


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