Slice-selective Zero Echo Time imaging of ultra-short T2 tissues based on spin-locking
Purpose: To expand the capabilities of Zero Echo Time (ZTE) pulse sequences with a slice selection method suitable for the shortest-lived tissues in the body. Methods: We introduce two new sequences that integrate spin-locking pulses into standard ZTE imaging to achieve slice selection: one for mode...
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose: To expand the capabilities of Zero Echo Time (ZTE) pulse sequences
with a slice selection method suitable for the shortest-lived tissues in the
body.
Methods: We introduce two new sequences that integrate spin-locking pulses
into standard ZTE imaging to achieve slice selection: one for moderately short
$T_2$ (DiSLoP), the other for ultra-short $T_2$ samples (PreSLoP). These
methods exploit the slower signal decay (at $T_{1\rho}\gg T_2$) to retain the
magnetization in the slices during the selection process, which is otherwise
comparable to or even much longer than $T_2$.
Results: We demonstrate control over the slice profiles and positions for 2D
imaging. We measure magnetization decay times during spin-locking ($T_{1\rho}$)
as a function of pulse amplitude, showing significant lifetime enhancement for
amplitudes as low as 10 uT. We show imaging of slice-selected samples with
$T_2$ characteristic times in the range of single milliseconds with DiSLoP and
PreSLoP, and with the latter for sub-millisecond $T_2$ tissues. As compared to
standard 3D ZTE sequences, PreSLoP achieves the same signal-to-noise ratio
(SNR) in 2-5 times shorter scan times, and we argue that this is due to the
filling scheme of the finite gap at the center of $k$-space unavoidable with
ZTE sequences. Finally, we discuss a combination of DiSLoP with a dynamical
decoupling sequence to avoid this central gap, leading to further scan time
accelerations.
Conclusions: The proposed sequences are capable of slice-selected 2D imaging
of tissues with $T_2$ as low as 275 us with good SNR within clinically
acceptable scan times. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2201.06305 |