Fast-spin-echo versus rapid gradient-echo for 3D magnetization-prepared acquisitions: Application to inhomogeneous magnetization transfer.

Taso, Manuel, Fanny Munsch, Olivier M Girard, Guillaume Duhamel, David C Alsop, and Gopal Varma. 2023. “Fast-Spin-Echo versus Rapid Gradient-Echo for 3D Magnetization-Prepared Acquisitions: Application to Inhomogeneous Magnetization Transfer.”. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 89 (2): 550-64.

Abstract

PURPOSE: To evaluate the benefits of fast spin echo (FSE) imaging over rapid gradient-echo (RAGE) for magnetization-prepared inhomogeneous magnetization transfer (ihMT) imaging.

METHODS: A 3D FSE sequence was modified to include an ihMT preparation (ihMT-FSE) with an optional CSF suppression based on an inversion-recovery (ihMT-FLAIR). After numeric simulations assessing SNR benefits of FSE and the potential impact of an additional inversion-recovery, ihMT-RAGE, ihMT-FSE, and ihMT-FLAIR sequences were compared in a group of six healthy volunteers, evaluating image quality, thermal, and physiological noise as well as quantification using an ihMT saturation (ihMTsat) approach. A preliminary exploration in the cervical spinal cord was also conducted in a group of three healthy volunteers.

RESULTS: Several fold improvements in thermal SNR were observed with ihMT-FSE in agreement with numerical simulations. However, we observed significantly higher physiological noise in ihMT-FSE compared to ihMT-RAGE that was mitigated in ihMT-FLAIR, which provided the best total SNR (+74% and +49% compared to ihMT-RAGE in the white and gray matter, P ≤ 0.004). IhMTsat quantification was successful in all cases with strong correlation between all sequences (r2  > 0.75). Early experiments showed potential for spinal cord imaging.

CONCLUSIONS: FSE generally offers higher SNR compared to gradient-echo based acquisitions for magnetization-prepared contrasts as illustrated here in the case of ihMT. However, physiological noise has a significant effect, but an inversion-recovery-based CSF suppression was shown to be efficient in mitigating effects of CSF motion.

Last updated on 11/24/2025
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