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Improved velocity‐selective‐inversion arterial spin labeling for cerebral blood flow mapping with 3D acquisition
Author(s) -
Liu Dapeng,
Xu Feng,
Li Wenbo,
Zijl Peter C.,
Lin Doris D.,
Qin Qin
Publication year - 2020
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.28310
Subject(s) - imaging phantom , cerebral blood flow , arterial spin labeling , nuclear magnetic resonance , pulse sequence , pulse (music) , flip angle , signal (programming language) , sensitivity (control systems) , materials science , perfusion , biomedical engineering , perfusion scanning , physics , nuclear medicine , computer science , magnetic resonance imaging , medicine , optics , radiology , anesthesia , electronic engineering , detector , programming language , engineering
Purpose To further optimize the velocity‐selective arterial spin labeling (VSASL) sequence utilizing a Fourier‐transform based velocity‐selective inversion (FT‐VSI) pulse train, and to evaluate its utility for 3D mapping of cerebral blood flow (CBF) with a gradient‐ and spin‐echo (GRASE) readout. Methods First, numerical simulations and phantom experiments were done to test the susceptibility to eddy currents and B 1 field inhomogeneities for FT‐VSI pulse trains with block and composite refocusing pulses. Second, the choices of the post‐labeling delay (PLD) for FT‐VSI prepared 3D VSASL were evaluated for the sensitivity to perfusion signal. The study was conducted among a young‐age and a middle‐age group at 3T. Both signal‐to‐noise ratio (SNR) and CBF were quantitatively compared with pseudo‐continuous ASL (PCASL). The optimized 3D VSI‐ASL was also qualitatively compared with PCASL in a whole‐brain coverage among two healthy volunteers and a brain tumor patient. Results The simulations and phantom test showed that composite refocusing pulses are more robust to both eddy‐currents and B 1 field inhomogeneities than block pulses. 3D VSASL images with FT‐VSI preparation were acquired over a range of PLDs and PLD = 1.2 s was selected for its higher perfusion signal. FT‐VSI labeling produced quantitative CBF maps with 27% higher SNR in gray matter compared to PCASL. 3D whole‐brain CBF mapping using VSI‐ASL were comparable to the corresponding PCASL results. Conclusion FT‐VSI with 3D‐GRASE readout was successfully implemented and showed higher sensitivity to perfusion signal than PCASL for both young and middle‐aged healthy volunteers.

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