Effects from RF spoiling disequilibrium in the background offsets of phase-contrast velocity imaging
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Effects from RF spoiling disequilibrium in the background offsets of phase-contrast velocity imaging Peter D Gatehouse1*, Andreas Greiser2, David N Firmin1 From 15th Annual SCMR Scientific Sessions Orlando, FL, USA. 2-5 February 2012 Summary To investigate how disequilibrium of spoiling affects background offset errors in phase-contrast velocity images. Background Phase-contrast imaging normally uses gradient-echoes with RF spoiling and phase-encode rewinding with a fixed dephasing by gradient “spoiler” pulses in each TR (time between RF pulses) studied in detail (1) where effective artifact suppression in magnitude images required >≈ 8PI dephasing over the slice thickness, with >≈ 2PI dephasing over an FE pixel. However, the effectiveness of spoiling depends on establishing a steadystate. In phase-contrast imaging, background offsets are known to stabilise in continuous scanning such as retrospective gating, but sequence interruptions can be necessary eg in navigator-gating or slice-tracking. Unsteady background offsets are generally ascribed to disturbed equilibrium in eddy-current effects. This abstract is a first investigation of contributions from disequilibrium in spoiling. Methods To separate the two sources of unsteady background, the RF pulses in a non-segmented prospectively-triggered 50-frame cine phase-contrast 1m/s sequence were disabled in frames 21-30 while the gradient waveforms continued for those frames. Therefore data from frames 1-20 (“pre” RF interruption) include both sources while frames 31-50 (“post”) contain only spoiling disequilibrium effects. Background velocity offsets in muscle and 1 Royal Brompton Hospital, London, UK Full list of author information is available at the end of the article
fat were measured at 3T as functions of flip angle (20 30°), spoiler gradients (50,100,150% of the values in ref. 1) and TR (4.2 - 13.1ms).
Results and discussion The different muscle and fat variations (Figure 1) imply incomplete spoiling, since eddy currents would affect both equally. Furthermore, the variations also occur post RF interruption. The results in Table 1 show: stronger variations in fat than muscle ; pre variations slightly larger than post ; no impact of greater spoiler amplitude; variations decrease sharply with lower flip angle and decrease with longer TR. A similar effect was observed in cardiac imaging (Figure 1b). Averaging was not used for the results, but was used in Figure 1 to display the effect clearly. Further work is needed to determine if the transition to equilibrium for RF spoiling can be optimised for phase-contrast imaging, and also what impact this effect has on flow measurements and whether it also occurs in blood. Thorough investigation of the optimum flip angle in phase-contrast imaging is also indicated. Conclusions Most of the results are consistent with incomplete spoiling in the early frames of a cine as the spoiling equilibrium is established, for example the longer T2 of fat explains its larger signals in higher-order pat
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