Volumetric T2-weighted spin echo imaging with improved SNR using localized quadratic encoding and a spiral readout trajectory

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Volumetric T2-weighted spin echo imaging with improved SNR using localized quadratic encoding and a spiral readout trajectory

Dahan Kim, Dinghui Wang, Tzu-cheng Chao, Norbert Campeau, James G. Pipe

Abstract

Purpose

To demonstrate T2-weighted (single-echo) spin-echo (SE) imaging with near-optimal acquisition efficiency by applying SNR-efficient RF slice encoding and spiral readout.

Methods

A quadratic-phase (frequency swept) excitation RF pulse replaced the conventional excitation in T2-weighted SE sequence to excite a thick slab that is internally spatially encoded by a variable phase along the slice direction. Highly overlapping slabs centered at every desired slice location were acquired in multiple passes, such that the entire imaging volume was excited by contiguous slabs in any given pass. Following 90° excitation, each slab was refocused with a conventional 180° RF to produce a SE signal, followed by a spiral in-out readout. A noise-insensitive reconstruction removed the quadratic phase in the spatial frequency domain, yielding desired slice resolution and improved SNR.

Results

Increasing the RF frequency sweep (hence, excitation width) allowed more frequent encoding of each slice over the multiple passes, improving final image SNR, until crosstalk ensued at excessive slab widths compared to their center-to-center spacing. With an optimized slab width, the proposed technique used all passes to acquire every prescribed slice, with substantially improved SNR over conventional SE or 2D-turbo-spin-echo (TSE) scans. Quantitative SNR measurements indicated similar SNR as 3D-TSE, but radiologist scoring favored 3D-TSE, mainly because of spiral-related artifacts and possibly because of regularized reconstructions in 3D-TSE.

Conclusion

Using SNR-efficient slice excitation scheme and spiral readout helped eliminate SNR and temporal inefficiencies in conventional T2-weighted imaging, yielding SNR independent of TR or number of passes.