Abstract
This study aimed to develop a new high-resolution MRI sequence for the imaging of the ultra-short transverse relaxation time (uT2) components in the brain, while simultaneously providing proton density (PD) contrast for reference and quantification. The sequence combines low flip angle balanced SSFP (bSSFP) and UTE techniques, together with a 3D dual-echo rosette k-space trajectory for readout. The expected image contrast was evaluated by simulations. A study cohort of six healthy volunteers and eight multiple sclerosis (MS) patients was recruited to test the proposed sequence. Subtraction between two TEs was performed to extract uT2 signals. In addition, conventional longitudinal relaxation time (T1) weighted, T2-weighted, and PD-weighted MRI sequences were also acquired for comparison. Typical PD-contrast was found in the second TE images, while uT2 signals were selectively captured in the first TE images. The subtraction images presented signals primarily originating from uT2 components, but only if the first TE is short enough. Lesions in the MS subjects showed hyperintense signals in the second TE images but were hypointense signals in the subtraction images. The lesions had significantly lower signal intensity in subtraction images than normal white matter (WM), which indicated a reduction of uT2 components likely associated with myelin. 3D isotropic sub-millimeter (0.94 mm) spatial resolution images were acquired with the novel bSSFP UTE sequence within 3 min. It provided easy extraction of uT2 signals and PD-contrast for reference within a single acquisition.
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