Oscillating diffusion‐encoding with a high gradient‐amplitude and high slew‐rate head‐only gradient for human brain imaging

Purpose We investigate the importance of high gradient‐amplitude and high slew‐rate on oscillating gradient spin echo (OGSE) diffusion imaging for human brain imaging and evaluate human brain imaging with OGSE on the MAGNUS head‐gradient insert (200 mT/m amplitude and 500 T/m/s slew rate). Methods S...

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Published inMagnetic resonance in medicine Vol. 84; no. 2; pp. 950 - 965
Main Authors Tan, Ek T., Shih, Robert Y., Mitra, Jhimli, Sprenger, Tim, Hua, Yihe, Bhushan, Chitresh, Bernstein, Matt A., McNab, Jennifer A., DeMarco, J. Kevin, Ho, Vincent B., Foo, Thomas K. F.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.08.2020
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Summary:Purpose We investigate the importance of high gradient‐amplitude and high slew‐rate on oscillating gradient spin echo (OGSE) diffusion imaging for human brain imaging and evaluate human brain imaging with OGSE on the MAGNUS head‐gradient insert (200 mT/m amplitude and 500 T/m/s slew rate). Methods Simulations with cosine‐modulated and trapezoidal‐cosine OGSE at various gradient amplitudes and slew rates were performed. Six healthy subjects were imaged with the MAGNUS gradient at 3T with OGSE at frequencies up to 100 Hz and b = 450 s/mm2. Comparisons were made against standard pulsed gradient spin echo (PGSE) diffusion in vivo and in an isotropic diffusion phantom. Results Simulations show that to achieve high frequency and b‐value simultaneously for OGSE, high gradient amplitude, high slew rates, and high peripheral nerve stimulation limits are required. A strong linear trend for increased diffusivity (mean: 8–19%, radial: 9–27%, parallel: 8–15%) was observed in normal white matter with OGSE (20 Hz to 100 Hz) as compared to PGSE. Linear fitting to frequency provided excellent correlation, and using a short‐range disorder model provided radial long‐term diffusivities of D∞,MD = 911 ± 72 µm2/s, D∞,PD = 1519 ± 164 µm2/s, and D∞,RD = 640 ± 111 µm2/s and correlation lengths of lc,MD = 0.802 ± 0.156 µm, lc,PD = 0.837 ± 0.172 µm, and lc,RD = 0.780 ± 0.174 µm. Diffusivity changes with OGSE frequency were negligible in the phantom, as expected. Conclusion The high gradient amplitude, high slew rate, and high peripheral nerve stimulation thresholds of the MAGNUS head‐gradient enables OGSE acquisition for in vivo human brain imaging.
Bibliography:Funding information
CDMRP, Grant/Award Numbers: W81XWH‐16‐2‐0054; National Institutes of Health, Grant/Award Numbers: NIH U01EB026976, NIH U01EB024450
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ISSN:0740-3194
1522-2594
DOI:10.1002/mrm.28180