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Comparison of gradient echo and gradient echo sampling of spin echo sequence for the quantification of the oxygen extraction fraction from a combined quantitative susceptibility mapping and quantitative BOLD (QSM+qBOLD) approach
Author(s) -
Hubertus Simon,
Thomas Sebastian,
Cho Junghun,
Zhang Shun,
Wang Yi,
Schad Lothar Rudi
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
magnetic resonance in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.696
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1522-2594
pISSN - 0740-3194
DOI - 10.1002/mrm.27804
Subject(s) - quantitative susceptibility mapping , white matter , nuclear magnetic resonance , gradient echo , spin echo , chemistry , nuclear medicine , magnetic resonance imaging , physics , medicine , radiology
Purpose To compare gradient echo (GRE) and gradient echo sampling of spin echo (GESSE) sequences for the quantification of the oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) from combined quantitative BOLD and quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) with regard to accuracy, precision and parameter initialization. Methods GRE and GESSE data were acquired from 7 healthy volunteers. QSM was applied to the GRE data and used as a regularization for the single‐compartment quantitative BOLD fit to the GESSE and GRE data, respectively, to quantify OEF, deoxygenated blood volume (ν), R 2 , and non‐blood susceptibility (χ nb ). Intersubject means within gray and white matter, respectively, were compared between GESSE and GRE (Student's t) and gray–white matter contrast was determined for each sequence separately. A single‐ and multi‐compartment simulation was used to compare reconstruction accuracy. Results Intersubject means and SDs for gray and white matter were OEF = 32.4 ± 1.6%, ν = 2.9 ± 0.1%, R 2 = 14.2 ± 0.5 Hz, χ nb = −43 ± 5 ppb for GESSE and OEF = 43.0 ± 5.4%, ν = 3.5 ± 0.4%, R 2 = 14.4 ± 0.7 Hz, χ nb = −43 ± 8 ppb for GRE with a significant difference ( P < 0.05) for OEF and ν. Gray–white matter contrast was significant ( P < 0.05) in all parameters for GESSE but only in ν and R 2 for GRE. All parameters reconstructed from GESSE had higher accuracy than from GRE in the single‐ but not multi‐compartment simulation. Conclusion GESSE yields higher parameter accuracy in simulated gray matter but produces unphysiological gray–white matter contrast in OEF in vivo. GRE produces uniform OEF maps in vivo and is more efficient, which could facilitate a clinical implementation, but revealed biases in simulation. The appropriate sequence should be chosen depending on application.

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