Spatially and velocity-selective magnetization preparation for noncontrast-enhanced peripheral MR angiography.

TitleSpatially and velocity-selective magnetization preparation for noncontrast-enhanced peripheral MR angiography.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsShin T, Lee H-S, Zun Z, Jang J
JournalNMR Biomed
Volume36
Issue7
Paginatione4901
Date Published2023 Jul
ISSN1099-1492
KeywordsArteries, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Angiography, Signal-To-Noise Ratio
Abstract

The purpose of the current study was to develop spatially and velocity-selective (SVS) magnetization preparation pulses for noncontrast-enhanced peripheral MR angiography (MRA) to provide comparisons with velocity-selective (VS) MRA with comparison to velocity-selective (VS). VS preparation pulses were designed by concatenating multiple excitation steps, each of which was a combination of a hard RF pulse, VS unipolar gradient pulses, and refocusing RF pulses. SVS preparation pulses were designed by replacing the hard RF pulse with a sinc-shaped RF pulse combined with a symmetric tripolar gradient pulse (which does not perturb the velocity encoding by the VS unipolar gradient pulses). Numerical simulations were performed to verify the intended hybrid excitation selectivity of SVS pulses taking account of tissue relaxation, magnetic field errors, and eddy currents. In vivo experiments were performed in healthy subjects to verify the hybrid excitation selectivity, as well as to demonstrate the visualization of the entire peripheral arteries using six-station protocols. As demonstrated by numerical simulations, SVS preparation yielded a notch-shaped longitudinal magnetization (Mz )-velocity response within the spatial stopband (the same as VS preparation) and preserved the Mz of spins outside the stopband, regardless of its velocity. We confirmed these observations also through in vivo tests with good agreement in normalized arterial and muscle signal intensities. In six-station peripheral MRA experiments, the proposed SVS-MRA yielded significantly higher arterial signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) (51.6 ± 14.3 vs. 38.9 ± 10.9; p < 0.001) and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) (41.2 ± 13.0 vs. 31.3 ± 10.5; p < 0.001) compared with VS-MRA. The proposed SVS-MRA improves arterial SNR and CNR compared with VS-MRA by mitigating undesired presaturation of arterial blood upstream the imaging field of view.

DOI10.1002/nbm.4901
Alternate JournalNMR Biomed
PubMed ID36632695
Related Institute: 
MRI Research Institute (MRIRI)

Weill Cornell Medicine
Department of Radiology
525 East 68th Street New York, NY 10065