Abstract

In this article, we present a 3D imaging technique, applying center-out RAdial Sampling with Off-Resonance reception, to accurately depict and localize small paramagnetic objects with high positive contrast while suppressing long T(2) (*) components. The center-out RAdial Sampling with Off-Resonance reception imaging technique is a fully frequency-encoded 3D ultrashort echo time acquisition method, which uses a large excitation bandwidth and off-resonance reception. By manually introducing an offset, Δf(0), to the central reception frequency (f(0)), the typical radial signal pileup observed in 3D center-out sampling caused by a dipolar magnetic field disturbance can be shifted toward the source of the field disturbance, resulting in a hyperintense signal at the magnetic center of the small paramagnetic object. This was demonstrated both theoretically and using 1D time domain simulations. Experimental verification was done in a gel phantom and in inhomogeneous porcine tissue containing various objects with very different geometry and susceptibility, namely, subvoxel stainless steel spheres, a puncture needle, and paramagnetic brachytherapy seeds. In all cases, center-out RAdial Sampling with Off-Resonance reception was shown to generate high positive contrast exactly at the location of the paramagnetic object, as was confirmed by X-ray computed tomography.

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