For many clinical applications of proton MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) of the brain, diagnostic assessment is limited by insufficient coverage provided by single- or multislice acquisition methods as well as by the use of volume preselection methods. Additionally, traditional spectral analysis methods may limit the operator to detailed analysis of only a few selected brain regions. It is therefore highly desirable to use a fully 3D approach, combined with spectral analysis procedures that enable automated assessment of 3D metabolite distributions over the whole brain. In this study, a 3D echo-planar MRSI technique has been implemented without volume preselection to provide sufficient spatial resolution with maximum coverage of the brain. Using MRSI acquisitions in normal subjects at 1.5T and a fully automated spectral analysis procedure, an assessment of the resultant spectral quality and the extent of viable data in human brain was carried out. The analysis found that 69% of brain voxels were obtained with acceptable spectral quality at TE = 135 ms, and 52% at TE = 25 ms. Most of the rejected voxels were located near the sinuses or temporal bones and demonstrated poor Bo homogeneity and additional regions were affected by stronger lipid contamination at TE = 25 ms. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Ebel, A., Soher, B. J., & Maudsley, A. A. (2001). Assessment of 3D proton MR echo-planar spectroscopic imaging using automated spectral analysis. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 46(6), 1072–1078. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.1301
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