Abstract
The quality of spectra in 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) is strongly affected by temporal signal instabilities during the acquisition. One reason for these instabilities are hardware imperfections, e.g., drifts of the main magnetic field in superconducting magnets. This is of special concern in high-field systems where the specification of the field stability is close to the spectral linewidth. A second major potential source of artifacts, particularly in clinical MRS, is patient motion. Using standard acquisition schemes of phase-cycled averaging of the individual acquisitions, long-term effects (field drifts) as well as changes on a shorter time scale (motion) can severely reduce spectral quality. The new technique for volume-selective MRS presented here is based on the additional interleaved acquisition of a navigator signal during the recovery time of the metabolite acquisition. It corrects for temporal signal instabilities by means of a deconvolution of the metabolite and the navigator signal. This leads to phase-corrected individual metabolite scans and upon summation to a phase-coherent averaging scheme. The interleaved navigator acquisition does not require any user interaction or supervision, while sequence efficiency is maintained. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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Thiel, T., Czisch, M., Elbel, G. K., & Hennig, J. (2002). Phase coherent averaging in magnetic resonance spectroscopy using interleaved navigator scans: Compensation of motion artifacts and magnetic field instabilities. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 47(6), 1077–1082. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.10174
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