Magnetic resonance in medicine : official journal of the Society of Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
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The inherent distortions in echo-planar imaging that arise due to inhomogeneities in the static magnetic field can lead to difficulties when attempting to obtain structurally accurate diffusion-tensor imaging data. Parallel acceleration techniques can reduce the magnitude of these distortions but do not remove them entirely. Images can be corrected using a measured field map, but this is prone to error. ⋯ This allows benefits of the blip-reversed approach to be exploited, with only a modest increase in scan time and, due to the extra data acquired, no significant loss of signal-to-noise efficiency. A novel approach to recombining blip-reversed data is also presented, which involves refining the measured field map, using an algorithm to minimize the difference between the corrected images. The field map refinement is also applicable to conventionally acquired blip-reversed sequences.
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We have discovered a simple and highly robust method for removal of chemical shift artifact in spin-echo MR images, which simultaneously decreases the radiofrequency power deposition (specific absorption rate). The method is demonstrated in spin-echo echo-planar imaging brain images acquired at 7 T, with complete suppression of scalp fat signal. When excitation and refocusing pulses are sufficiently different in duration, and thus also different in the amplitude of their slice-select gradients, a spatial mismatch is produced between the fat slices excited and refocused, with no overlap. ⋯ This enables greater volume coverage per unit time, well suited for functional and diffusion studies using spin-echo echo-planar imaging. Moreover, the method can be generally applied to any sequence involving slice-selective excitation and at least one slice-selective refocusing pulse at high magnetic field strengths. The method is more efficient than gradient reversal methods and more robust against inhomogeneities of the static (polarizing) field (B(0)).