CHEmical-shift selective Adiabatic Pulse (CHEAP): Fast and High Resolution Downfield 3D 1H-MRSI at 7T
The key molecules such as triphosphate (ATP), glutathione (GSH), and homocarnosine (hCs) - central to metabolic processes in the human brain remain elusive or challenging to detect with upfield 1H-MRSI. Traditional 3D 1H-MRSI in vivo faces challenges, including a low signal-to-noise ratio and magnet...
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Zusammenfassung: | The key molecules such as triphosphate (ATP), glutathione (GSH), and
homocarnosine (hCs) - central to metabolic processes in the human brain remain
elusive or challenging to detect with upfield 1H-MRSI. Traditional 3D 1H-MRSI
in vivo faces challenges, including a low signal-to-noise ratio and
magnetization transfer effects with water, leading to prolonged measurement
times and reduced resolution. To address these limitations, we propose a
downfield 3D-MRSI method aimed at measuring downfield metabolites with enhanced
spatial resolution, and speed acceptable for clinical practice at 7T. The
CHEmical-shift selective Adiabatic Pulse (CHEAP) technique was integrated into
echo-planar spectroscopic imaging (EPSI) readout sequence for downfield
metabolite and water reference 3D-MRSI. Five healthy subjects and two glioma
patients were scanned to test the feasibility. In this work, CHEAP-EPSI
technique is shown to significantly enhance spatial the resolution to 0.37 ml
while simultaneously reducing the scan time to 10.5 minutes. Its distinct
advantages include low specific absorption rate, effective suppression of water
and lipid signals, and minimal baseline distortions, making it a valuable tool
for research or potentially diagnostic purposes. CHEAP-EPSI improves the
detection sensitivity of downfield metabolites like N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA+)
and DF8.18 (ATP&GSH+), and offers new possibilities for the study of metabolism
in healthy and diseased brain. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2501.08827 |