Fast Spectroscopic Imaging and Field Compensation Using Frequency Modulation at Ultra-High-Field
2016-06
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Fast Spectroscopic Imaging and Field Compensation Using Frequency Modulation at Ultra-High-Field
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2016-06
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The high energy phosphates (HEP) in the myocardium, which are critical to understanding the cardiac function in both normal and pathophysiologic states, can be assessed non-invasively in vivo using phosphorus-31 (31P) spectroscopy. Compared to proton, for the same volume and magnetic field strength, the available signal-to-noise (SNR) ratio of the HEP metabolites is orders of magnitude lower mainly due to its intrinsically low concentration. Hence, cardiac spectroscopy greatly benefits when performed at ultra-high-fields (UHF, ≥ 7 T), both in terms of increased SNR and increased spectroscopic resolution. However, at ultra-high-field strengths, complications arise from the RF transmit wavelength becoming comparable or smaller than the field-of-view (FOV), thus exhibiting wave-like behavior. Furthermore, even with the spectroscopic resolution afforded at UHF, measuring myocardial inorganic phosphate (Pi) is still a challenge and has been a major barrier in extracting the ATP turnover rate. Recently, an indirect way of extracting the ATP hydrolysis rate forgoing direct measurement of Pi was established. In this work, we combine this method with the T1nom method to monitor the transmural distribution of forward creatine kinase reaction (kf,CK) and ATP hydrolysis rate (kr,ATPase) of the myocardium, effectively reducing data acquisition time by up to an order of magnitude. In addition, a new class of 2D FM pulses and multidimensional adiabatic pulses are presented, which can compensate for B1 inhomogeneity through its spatiotemporal properties. These pulses should be valuable for spectroscopic applications at ultra-high-fields.
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University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2016. Major: Electrical Engineering. Advisors: Jianyi Zhang, Michael Garwood. 1 computer file (PDF); ix, 126 pages.
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Jang, Albert Woo Ju. (2016). Fast Spectroscopic Imaging and Field Compensation Using Frequency Modulation at Ultra-High-Field. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/182287.
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