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Reduction of Acquisition time using Partition of the sIgnal Decay in Spectroscopic Imaging technique (RAPID-SI)

Author

Listed:
  • Sourav Bhaduri
  • Patricia Clement
  • Eric Achten
  • Hacene Serrai

Abstract

To overcome long acquisition times of Chemical Shift Imaging (CSI), a new Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Imaging (MRSI) technique called Reduction of Acquisition time by Partition of the sIgnal Decay in Spectroscopic Imaging (RAPID-SI) using blipped phase encoding gradients inserted during signal acquisition was developed. To validate the results using RAPID-SI and to demonstrate its usefulness in terms of acquisition time and data quantification; simulations, phantom and in vivo studies were conducted, and the results were compared to standard CSI. The method was based upon the partition of a magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) signal into sequential sub-signals encoded using blipped phase encoding gradients inserted during signal acquisition at a constant time interval. The RAPID-SI technique was implemented on a clinical 3 T Siemens scanner to demonstrate its clinical utility. Acceleration of data collection was performed by inserting R (R = acceleration factor) blipped gradients along a given spatial direction during data acquisition. Compared to CSI, RAPID-SI reduced acquisition time by the acceleration factor R. For example, a 2D 16x16 data set acquired in about 17 min with CSI, was reduced to approximately 2 min with the RAPID-SI (R = 8). While the SNR of the acquired RAPID-SI signal was lower compared to CSI by approximately the factor √R, it can be improved after data pre-processing and reconstruction. Compared to CSI, RAPID-SI reduces acquisition time, while preserving metabolites information. Furthermore, the method is flexible and could be combined with other acceleration methods such as Parallel Imaging.

Suggested Citation

  • Sourav Bhaduri & Patricia Clement & Eric Achten & Hacene Serrai, 2018. "Reduction of Acquisition time using Partition of the sIgnal Decay in Spectroscopic Imaging technique (RAPID-SI)," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 13(11), pages 1-17, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0207015
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0207015
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