Intravascular BOLD signal characterization of balanced SSFP experiments in human blood at high to ultrahigh fields

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Intravascular BOLD signal characterization of balanced SSFP experiments in human blood at high to ultrahigh fields

Marlon Pérez‐Rodas, Rolf Pohmann, Klaus Scheffler, Rahel Heule

Abstract

Purpose

To investigate the intravascular contribution to the overall balanced SSFP (bSSFP) BOLD effect in human blood at high to ultrahigh field strengths (3 T, 9.4 T, and 14.1 T).

Methods

Venous blood prepared at two different oxygenation levels (deoxygenated: Y ≈ 71%, oxygenated: Y ≈ 94%) was measured with phase‐cycled bSSFP for varying TRs/flip angles at 3 T, 9.4 T, and 14.1 T. The oxygen sensitivity was analyzed by intrinsic MIRACLE (motion‐insensitive rapid configuration relaxometry)‐R2 estimation and passband signal differences. The intravascular BOLD‐related signal change was extracted from the measured data for microvasculature and macrovasculature, and compared with the extravascular contribution obtained by Monte Carlo simulations.

Results

The MIRACLE‐R2 values showed a characteristic increase with longer TRs in deoxygenated blood, corroborating that SE‐R2 data cannot be used to assess the intravascular bSSFP BOLD effect. Passband bSSFP signal differences measured at optimal flip angles of 30° at 3 T and 20° at 9.4 T/14.1 T revealed considerable relative intravascular contributions of 95%/70% at 3 T, 74%/43% at 9.4 T, 66%/46% at 14.1 T for TR = 5 ms, and 90%/65% at 3 T, 36%/27% at 9.4 T, 13%/15% at 14.1 T for TR = 10 ms in macrovascular/microvascular regimes.

Conclusion

The results indicate that intravascular effects have to be considered to better understand the origin of bSSFP BOLD contrast in functional MRI experiments, especially at short TRs. The MIRACLE‐R2 method demonstrated the ability to quantify the apparent decrease in R2 due to rapid RF refocusing.