Diffusion weighted hyperpolarized 129Xe MRI of the lung with 2D and 3D (FLORET) spiral

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Diffusion weighted hyperpolarized 129Xe MRI of the lung with 2D and 3D (FLORET) spiral

Abdullah S. Bdaiwi, Matthew M. Willmering, Hui Wang, Zackary I. Cleveland

Abstract

Purpose

To enable efficient hyperpolarized 129Xe diffusion imaging using 2D and 3D (Fermat Looped, ORthogonally Encoded Trajectories, FLORET) spiral sequences and demonstrate that 129Xe ADCs obtained using these sequences are comparable to those obtained using a conventional, 2D gradient-recalled echo (GRE) sequence.

Theory and Methods

Diffusion-weighted 129Xe MRI (b-values = 0, 7.5, 15 s/cm2) was performed in four healthy volunteers and one subject with lymphangioleiomyomatosis using slice-selective 2D-GRE (scan time = 15 s), slice-selective 2D-Spiral (4 s), and 3D-FLORET (16 s) sequences. Experimental SNRs from b-value = 0 images (SNR0EX) and mean ADC values were compared across sequences. In two healthy subjects, a second b = 0 image was acquired using the 2D-Spiral sequence to map flip angle and correct RF-induced, hyperpolarized signal decay at the voxel level, thus improving regional ADC estimates.

Results

Diffusion-weighted images from spiral sequences displayed image quality comparable to 2D-GRE and produced sufficient (SNR0EX) (16.8 ± 3.8 for 2D-GRE, 21.2 ± 3.5 for 2D-Spiral, 20.4 ± 3.5 for FLORET) to accurately calculate ADC. Whole-lung means and SDs of ADC obtained via spiral were not significantly different (P > 0.54) from those obtained via 2D-GRE. Finally, 2D-Spiral images were corrected for signal decay, which resulted in a whole-lung mean ADC decrease of ˜15%, relative to uncorrected images.

Conclusions

Relative to GRE, efficient spiral sequences allow 129Xe diffusion images to be acquired with isotropic lung coverage (3D), higher SNR (2D and 3D), and three-fold faster (2D) within a single breath-hold. In turn, shortened breath-holds enable flip-angle mapping, and thus, allow RF-induced signal decay to be corrected, increasing ADC accuracy.