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  4. Fast high-resolution brain metabolite mapping on a clinical 3T MRI by accelerated H-1-FID-MRSI and low-rank constrained reconstruction
 
research article

Fast high-resolution brain metabolite mapping on a clinical 3T MRI by accelerated H-1-FID-MRSI and low-rank constrained reconstruction

Klauser, Antoine
•
Courvoisier, Sebastien
•
Kasten, Jeffrey  
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May 1, 2019
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine

Purpose: Epitomizing the advantages of ultra short echo time and no chemical shift displacement error, high-resolution-free induction decay magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (FID-MRSI) sequences have proven to be highly effective in providing unbiased characterizations of metabolite distributions. However, its merits are often overshadowed in high-resolution settings by reduced signal-to-noise ratios resulting from the smaller voxel volumes procured by extensive phase encoding and the related acquisition times.

Methods: To address these limitations, we here propose an acquisition and reconstruction scheme that offers both implicit dataset denoising and acquisition acceleration. Specifically, a slice selective high-resolution FID-MRSI sequence was implemented. Spectroscopic datasets were processed to remove fat contamination, and then reconstructed using a total generalized variation (TGV) regularized low-rank model. We further measured reconstruction performance for random under-sampled data to assess feasibility of a compressed-sensing SENSE acceleration scheme. Performance of the lipid suppression was assessed using an ad hoc phantom, while that of the low-rank TGV reconstruction model was benchmarked using simulated MRSI data. To assess real-world performance, 2D FID-MRSI acquisitions of the brain in healthy volunteers were reconstructed using the proposed framework.

Results: Results from the phantom and simulated data demonstrate that skull lipid contamination is effectively removed and that data reconstruction quality is improved with the low-rank TGV model. Also, we demonstrated that the presented acquisition and reconstruction methods are compatible with a compressed-sensing SENSE acceleration scheme.

Conclusions: An original reconstruction pipeline for 2D H-1-FID-MRSI datasets was presented that places high-resolution metabolite mapping on 3T MR scanners within clinically feasible limits.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/mrm.27623
Web of Science ID

WOS:000462688900003

Author(s)
Klauser, Antoine
Courvoisier, Sebastien
Kasten, Jeffrey  
Kocher, Michel  
Guerquin-Kern, Matthieu  
Van De Ville, Dimitri  
Lazeyras, Francois
Date Issued

2019-05-01

Publisher

WILEY

Published in
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
Volume

81

Issue

5

Start page

2841

End page

2857

Subjects

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging

•

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging

•

acceleration

•

brain metabolite

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compressed-sensing

•

magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging

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sense

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magnetic-resonance

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lipid suppression

•

image-reconstruction

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1h mrsi

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7 t

•

acquisition

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h-1-mrsi

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spectroscopy

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water

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echo

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

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MIPLAB  
Available on Infoscience
June 18, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/157748
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