Homogenous fat suppression for bilateral breast imaging using independent shims.

Misung Han, Charles H Cunningham, John M Pauly, Bruce L Daniel, Brian A Hargreaves
Author Information
  1. Misung Han: Department of Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA; Department of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA.

Abstract

PURPOSE: To demonstrate the capability of incorporating independent shims into a dual-band spectral-spatial excitation and to compare fat suppression between standard global shims and independent shims for in vivo bilateral breast imaging at 1.5T.
METHODS: A dual-band spectral-spatial excitation pulse was designed by interleaving two flyback spectral-spatial pulses, playing one during positive gradient lobes and the other during negative gradient lobes. Each slab was enabled to have an independent spatial offset, spectral offset, and slab-phase modulation by modulating radiofrequency phase, and independent linear shims were incorporated by playing extra shim gradients. Phantom experiments were performed to demonstrate the functionality of the pulse, and in vivo experiments were performed for 10 healthy volunteers to compare fat suppression between standard shims and independent shims.
RESULTS: The phantom experiments confirmed that the dual-band pulse can provide independent spectral and spatial offsets and linear shims to the two slabs. Independent shims provided qualitatively more homogeneous fat suppression than standard shims in seven out of 10 subjects, with equivalent fat suppression in two of the other three subjects.
CONCLUSION: Incorporating independent shims into the dual-band spectral-spatial excitation can provide homogeneous fat suppression in bilateral breast imaging.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. R01 EB009055/NIBIB NIH HHS
  2. P41 EB015891/NIBIB NIH HHS
  3. P41 RR009784/NCRR NIH HHS
  4. 1R01EB009055/NIBIB NIH HHS
  5. P41EB015891/NIBIB NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adipose Tissue
Algorithms
Artifacts
Breast
Female
Humans
Image Enhancement
Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Reproducibility of Results
Sensitivity and Specificity
Subtraction Technique

Word Cloud

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