Multidimensional compressed sensing to advance 23 Na multi-quantum coherences MRI

Sodium ( Na) multi-quantum coherences (MQC) MRI was accelerated using three-dimensional (3D) and a dedicated five-dimensional (5D) compressed sensing (CS) framework for simultaneous Cartesian single (SQ) and triple quantum (TQ) sodium imaging of in vivo human brain at 3.0 and 7.0 T. 3D Na MQC MRI re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Magnetic resonance in medicine 2024-03, Vol.91 (3), p.926-941
Hauptverfasser: Licht, Christian, Reichert, Simon, Guye, Maxime, Schad, Lothar R, Rapacchi, Stanislas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Sodium ( Na) multi-quantum coherences (MQC) MRI was accelerated using three-dimensional (3D) and a dedicated five-dimensional (5D) compressed sensing (CS) framework for simultaneous Cartesian single (SQ) and triple quantum (TQ) sodium imaging of in vivo human brain at 3.0 and 7.0 T. 3D Na MQC MRI requires multi-echo paired with phase-cycling and exhibits thus a multidimensional space. A joint reconstruction framework to exploit the sparsity in all imaging dimensions by extending the conventional 3D CS framework to 5D was developed. 3D MQC images of simulated brain, phantom and healthy brain volunteers obtained from 3.0 T and 7.0 T were retrospectively and prospectively undersampled. Performance of the CS models were analyzed by means of structural similarity index (SSIM), root mean squared error (RMSE), signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and signal quantification of tissue sodium concentration and TQ/SQ ratio. It was shown that an acceleration of three-fold, leading to less than min of scan time with a resolution of at 3.0 T, are possible. 5D CS improved SSIM by 3%, 5%, 1% and reduced RMSE by 50%, 30%, 8% for in vivo SQ, TQ, and TQ/SQ ratio maps, respectively. Furthermore, for the first time prospective undersampling enabled unprecedented high resolution from to MQC images of in vivo human brain at 7.0 T without extending acquisition time. 5D CS proved to allow up to three-fold acceleration retrospectively on 3.0 T data. 2-fold acceleration was demonstrated prospectively at 7.0 T to reach higher spatial resolution of Na MQC MRI.
ISSN:0740-3194
1522-2594
DOI:10.1002/mrm.29902