Abstract

Two-dimensional J-resolved localized and semi-localized by adiabatic selective refocusing (LASER and semi-LASER) spectroscopy, named "J-resolved LASER" and "J-resolved semi-LASER", were introduced to suppress chemical shift artifacts, additional J-refocused artifactual peaks from spatially dependent J-coupling evolution, and sensitivity to radiofrequency (RF) field inhomogeneity. Three pairs of adiabatic pulses were employed for voxel localization in J-resolved LASER and two pairs in J-resolved semi-LASER. The first half of t1 period was inserted between the last pair of adiabatic pulses, which was proposed in this work to obtain two-dimensional adiabatic J-resolved spectra of human brain for the first time. Phantom and human experiments were performed to demonstrate their feasibility and advantages over conventional J-resolved spectroscopy (JPRESS). Compared to JPRESS, J-resolved LASER or J-resolved semi-LASER exhibited significant suppression of chemical shift artifacts and additional J-refocused peaks from spatially dependent J-coupling evolution, and demonstrated insensitivity to the change of RF frequency offset over large bandwidth. Experiments on phantoms and human brains verified the feasibility and strengths of two-dimensional adiabatic J-resolved spectroscopy at 3T. This technique is expected to advance the application of in vivo two-dimensional MR spectroscopy at 3T and higher field strengths for more reliable and accurate quantification of metabolites.

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