Objective: To develop and assess a short-duration JPRESS protocol for detection of overlapping metabolite biomarkers and its application to paediatric brain tumours at 3 Tesla. Materials and methods: The short-duration protocol (6 min) was optimised and compared for spectral quality to a high-resolution (38 min) JPRESS protocol in a phantom and five healthy volunteers. The 6-min JPRESS was acquired from four paediatric brain tumours and compared with short-TE PRESS. Results: Metabolite identification between the 6- and 38-min protocols was comparable in phantom and volunteer data. For metabolites with Cramer–Rao lower bounds > 50%, interpretation of JPRESS increased confidence in assignment of lactate, myo-Inositol and scyllo-Inositol. JPRESS also showed promise for the detection of glycine and taurine in paediatric brain tumours when compared to short-TE MRS. Conclusion: A 6-min JPRESS protocol is well tolerated in paediatric brain tumour patients. Visual inspection of a 6-min JPRESS spectrum enables identification of a range of metabolite biomarkers of clinical interest.
CITATION STYLE
Carlin, D., Babourina-Brooks, B., Arvanitis, T. N., Wilson, M., & Peet, A. C. (2019). Short-acquisition-time JPRESS and its application to paediatric brain tumours. Magnetic Resonance Materials in Physics, Biology and Medicine, 32(2), 247–258. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10334-018-0716-6
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.