Abstract
PurposeTo design multidimensional spatially selective radiofrequency (RF) pulses for inner volume imaging (IVI) with three‐dimensional (3D) fast spin echo (FSE) sequences. Enhanced background suppression is achieved by exploiting particular signal properties of FSE sequences.Theory and MethodsThe CPMG condition dictates that echo amplitudes will rapidly decrease if a 90° phase difference between excitation and refocusing pulses is not present, and refocusing flip angles are not precisely 180°. This mechanism is proposed as a means for generating additional background suppression for spatially selective excitation, by biasing residual excitation errors toward violating the CPMG condition. 3D RF pulses were designed using this method with a 3D spherical spiral trajectory, under‐sampled by factor 5.6 for an eight‐channel PTx system, at 3 Tesla.Results3D‐FSE IVI with pulse durations of approximately 12 ms was demonstrated in phantoms and for T2‐weighted brain imaging in vivo. Good image quality was obtained, with mean background suppression factors of 103 and 82 ± 6 in phantoms and in vivo, respectively.ConclusionInner Volume Imaging with 3D‐FSE has been demonstrated in vivo with tailored 3D‐RF pulses. The proposed design methods are also applicable to 2D pulses. Magn Reson Med 76:848–861, 2016. © 2015 The Authors. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
Highlights
In a typical MRI examination, the majority of spatial encoding is achieved during signal reception, with the role of the excitation limited to localize within a slice or slab
N is calculated as the ratio of the mean signal from CPMG and non-CPMG excitations with the same excitation flip angle
As described by Eq [9], non-CPMG suppression is only part of the available background suppression, which relies on creating excitations with small flip angles in the outer volume
Summary
In a typical MRI examination, the majority of spatial encoding is achieved during signal reception, with the role of the excitation limited to localize within a slice or slab. Published online 00 Month 2015 in Wiley Online Library
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