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Respiratory-triggered quantitative MR spectroscopy of the human cervical spinal cord at 7 T
- Source :
- Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 2022, ⟨10.1002/mrm.29182⟩
- Publication Year :
- 2022
-
Abstract
- International audience; PurposeUltra-high fieldH MR spectroscopy (MRS) is of great interest to help characterizing human spinal cord pathologies. However, very few studies have been reported so far in this small size structure at these fields due to challenging experimental difficulties caused by static and radiofrequency field heterogeneities, as well as physiological motion. In this work, in line with the recent developments proposed to strengthen spinal cord MRS feasibility at 7 T, a respiratory-triggered acquisition approach was optimized to compensate for dynamic Bfield heterogeneities and to provide robust cervical spinal cord MRS data.MethodsA semi-LASER sequence was purposely used, and a dedicated raw data processing algorithm was developed to enhance MR spectral quality by discarding corrupted scans. To legitimate the choices done during the optimization stage, additional tests were carried out to determine the impact of breathing, voluntary motion, body mass index, and fitting algorithm. An in-house quantification tool was concomitantly designed for accurate estimation of the metabolite concentration ratios for choline, N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA), myo-inositol and glutathione. The method was tested on a cohort of 14 healthy volunteers.ResultsAverage water linewidth and NAA signal-to-noise ratio reached 0.04 ppm and 11.01, respectively. The group-average metabolic ratios were in good agreement with previous studies and showed intersession reproducibility variations below 30%.ConclusionThe developed approach allows a rise of the acquired MRS signal quality and of the quantification robustness as compared to previous studies hence offering strengthened possibilities to probe the metabolism of degenerative and traumatic spinal cord pathologies.
Details
- ISSN :
- 15222594 and 07403194
- Volume :
- 87
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Magnetic resonance in medicineREFERENCES
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7a616bcc5753c75254523b70d22c41ba