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A novel perfused Bloch–McConnell simulator for analyzing the accuracy of dynamic hyperpolarized MRS
Author(s) -
Walker Christopher M.,
Chen Yunyun,
Lai Stephen Y.,
Bankson James A.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.4939877
Subject(s) - nuclear magnetic resonance , parametric statistics , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , signal (programming language) , magnetic resonance imaging , excitation , in vivo magnetic resonance spectroscopy , bloch equations , chemistry , computational physics , spectroscopy , biological system , physics , computer science , mathematics , statistics , medicine , quantum mechanics , biology , radiology , programming language
Purpose: Magnetic resonance spectroscopy of hyperpolarized agents allows real‐time detection of metabolism in vivo . However, the nonrenewable nature of these signals necessitates data acquisitions that differ significantly from conventional magnetic resonance imaging. Signal evolution is permanently altered by the data acquisition scheme, potentially leading to sequence parameter‐dependent bias in quantification. The authors have developed a novel simulation environment to characterize the effects of sequence parameters on magnetic resonance spectroscopy‐based chemical exchange measurements using hyperpolarized pyruvate. Methods: Conventional Bloch–McConnell equations were coupled with a pharmacokinetic model for perfusion to allow realistic simulation of in vivo dynamic hyperpolarized signal evolution. In this study, simulations were conducted to explore effects of excitation angle and repetition time on the observed signal and subsequent parametric analysis. Both high and low apparent exchange rates were modeled under assumption of both perfused and closed systems. Bias due to sampling strategy bias was subsequently tested in vivo . Results: Simulation of dynamic magnetic resonance spectroscopy studies using hyperpolarized pyruvate demonstrated that for closed systems, accurate measurement of the apparent exchange rate was possible over a wide range of sequence parameters. This was true for both high and low apparent exchange rates, although a low exchange rate was associated with larger errors when excitation angles were high. When effects of perfusion were included to account for pyruvate delivery, a more restricted range of settings led to accurate quantification of exchange rates. Perfusion alleviated some of the errors seen at high excitation angles for low exchange rates. Residuals from parametric analysis did not generally correlate with fit accuracy, implying that the quality of the analysis model was not a major driver of error. Animal studies acquired with sequence parameters that are predicted to impart bias showed a significant under estimation of exchange rates ( P < 0.035) compared to parameter combinations that are not expected to bias measurements. Conclusions: The authors' results suggest that great care must be taken when measuring dynamic processes by magnetic resonance spectroscopy of hyperpolarized substrates. When comparing apparent exchange rates, choice of sequence parameters will affect the results. Bias introduced by parameters of more advanced acquisition and reconstruction schemes will likely increase compared to the relatively simple dynamic spectroscopy methods tested herein. The modified Bloch–McConnell equations the authors describe will be crucial tools for characterizing and optimizing the performance of these more advanced techniques.