Abstract

Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) of the spinal cord is technically challenging due to the size of its structure and susceptibility-induced field inhomogeneity, which impedes clinical applications. This study aimed to achieve high-fidelity spinal cord DTI with reasonable SNR and practical acquisition efficiency. Particularly, a distortion-free multi-shot EPI technique, namely point-spread-function encoded EPI (PSF-EPI), was adopted for diffusion imaging of the cervical spinal cord (CSC). The shot number can be reduced to six for sagittal scans through titled-CAIPI acceleration and partial Fourier undersampling, consequently rendering this technique beneficial in clinics. Fifteen healthy volunteers and seven patients with metallic implants underwent sagittal scans using tilted-CAIPI PSF-EPI at 3T. Unsuppressed fat signals were further removed by retrospective water/fat separation using the intrinsic chemical-shift encoded signals. Compared with multi-shot interleaved EPI method, highly accelerated PSF-EPI method provided evidently improved distortion reduction and higher consistency with anatomical references even with metallic implants. Additionally, axial DTI scans using PSF-EPI were also evaluated quantitatively, and the measured DTI metrics are similar to those obtained from the zonal oblique multi-slice EPI (ZOOM-EPI) method and reported values. The high anatomical consistency, practical scan time and quantitative reliability indicate PSF-EPI's clinical potential for CSC diffusion imaging.

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