Purpose: To evaluate the feasibility of applying the shells trajectory to single-phase contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance angiography. Materials and Methods: Several methods were developed to overcome the challenges of the clinical implementation of shells including off-resonance blurring (eg, from lipid signal), aliasing artifacts, and long reconstruction times. These methods included: 1) variable TR with variable readout length to reduce fat signal and off-resonance blurring; 2) variable sampling density to suppress aliasing artifacts while minimizing acquisition time penalty; and 3) an online 3D gridding algorithm that reconstructed an 8-channel, 2403 image volume set. Both phantom and human studies were performed to establish the initial feasibility of the methods. Results: Phantom and human study results demonstrated the effectiveness of the proposed methods. Shells with variable TR and readout length further suppressed the fat signal compared to the fixed-TR shells acquisition. Reduced image aliasing was achieved with minimal scan time penalty when a variable sampling density technique was used. The fast online reconstruction algorithm completed in 2 minutes at the scanner console, providing a timely image display in a clinical setting. Conclusion: It was demonstrated that the use of the shells trajectory is feasible in a clinical setting to acquire intracranial angiograms with high spatial resolution. Preliminary results demonstrate effective venous suppression in the cavernous sinuses and jugular vein region. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Shu, Y., Bernstein, M. A., Huston, J., & Rettmann, D. (2009). Contrast-enhanced intracranial magnetic resonance angiography with a spherical shells trajectory and online gridding reconstruction. Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, 30(5), 1101–1109. https://doi.org/10.1002/jmri.21938
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