Feasibility of undersampled spiral trajectories in MREPT for fast conductivity imaging

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Feasibility of undersampled spiral trajectories in MREPT for fast conductivity imaging

Safa Özdemir, Efe Ilicak, Jascha Zapp, Lothar R. Schad, Frank G. Zöllner

Abstract

Purpose

To investigate spiral-based imaging including trajectories with undersampling as a fast and robust alternative for phase-based magnetic resonance electrical properties tomography (MREPT) techniques.

Methods

Spiral trajectories with various undersampling ratios were prescribed to acquire images from an experimental phantom and a healthy volunteer at 3T. The non-Cartesian acquisitions were reconstructed using SPIRiT, and conductivity maps were derived using phase-based cr-MREPT. The resulting maps were compared between different sampling trajectories. Additionally, a conductivity map was obtained using a Cartesian balanced SSFP acquisition from the volunteer to comparatively demonstrate the robustness of the proposed method.

Results

The phantom and volunteer results illustrate the benefits of the spiral acquisitions. Specifically, undersampled spiral acquisitions display improved robustness against field inhomogeneity artifacts and lowered SD values with shortened readout times. Furthermore, average of conductivity values measured for the cerebrospinal fluid with the spiral acquisitions were 1.703 S/m, indicating a close agreement with the theoretical values of 1.794 S/m.

Conclusion

A spiral-based acquisition framework for conductivity imaging with and without undersampling is presented. Overall, spiral-based acquisitions improved robustness against field inhomogeneity artifacts, while achieving whole head coverage with multiple averages in less than a minute.