Abstract
To demonstrate speech-production real-time MRI (RT-MRI) using a contemporary 0.55T system, and to identify opportunities for improved performance compared with conventional field strengths. Experiments were performed on healthy adult volunteers using a 0.55T MRI system with high-performance gradients and a custom 8-channel upper airway coil. Imaging was performed using spiral-based balanced SSFP and gradient-recalled echo (GRE) pulse sequences using a temporal finite-difference constrained reconstruction. Speech-production RT-MRI was performed with three spiral readout durations (8.90, 5.58, and 3.48 ms) to determine trade-offs with respect to articulator contrast, blurring, banding artifacts, and overall image quality. Both spiral GRE and bSSFP captured tongue boundary dynamics during rapid consonant-vowel syllables. Although bSSFP provided substantially higher SNR in all vocal tract articulators than GRE, it suffered from banding artifacts at TR > 10.9 ms. Spiral bSSFP with the shortest readout duration (3.48 ms, TR = 5.30 ms) had the best image quality, with a 1.54-times boost in SNR compared with an equivalent GRE sequence. Longer readout durations led to increased SNR efficiency and blurring in both bSSFP and GRE. High-performance 0.55T MRI systems can be used for speech-production RT-MRI. Spiral bSSFP can be used without suffering from banding artifacts in vocal tract articulators, provide better SNR efficiency, and have better image quality than what is typically achieved at 1.5 T or 3 T.
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