Accelerating Brain Imaging Using a Silent Spatial Encoding Axis

Publication date

2022-10

Authors

Versteeg, EdwinORCID 0000-0003-3235-3970
Klomp, DennisORCID 0000-0002-5884-5386ISNI 0000000396514008
Siero, JeroenORCID 0000-0001-5079-2868ISNI 0000000394978810

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Document Type

Article

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Abstract

Purpose: To characterize the acceleration capabilities of a silent head insert gradient axis that operates at the inaudible frequency of 20 kHz and a maximum gradient amplitude of 40 mT/m without inducing peripheral nerve stimulation. Methods: The silent gradient axis' acquisitions feature an oscillating gradient in the phase-encoding direction that is played out on top of a cartesian readout, similarly as done in Wave-CAIPI. The additional spatial encoding fills k-space in readout lanes allowing for the acquisition of fewer phase-encoding steps without increasing aliasing artifacts. Fully sampled 2D gradient echo datasets were acquired both with and without the silent readout. All scans were retrospectively undersampled (acceleration factors R = 1 to 12) to compare conventional SENSE acceleration and acceleration using the silent gradient. The silent gradient amplitude and the readout bandwidth were varied to investigate the effect on artifacts and g-factor. Results: The silent readout reduced the g-factor for all acceleration factors when compared to SENSE acceleration. Increasing the silent gradient amplitude from 31.5 mT/m to 40 mT/m at an acceleration factor of 10 yielded a reduction in the average g-factor (gavg) from 1.3 ± 0.14 (gmax = 1.9) to 1.1 ± 0.09 (gmax = 1.6). Furthermore, reducing the number of cycles increased the readout bandwidth and the g-factor that reached gavg = 1.5 ± 0.16 for a readout bandwidth of 651 Hz/pixel and an acceleration factor of R = 8. Conclusion: A silent gradient axis enables high acceleration factors up to R = 10 while maintaining a g-factor close to unity (gavg = 1.1 and gmax = 1.6) and can be acquired with clinically relevant readout bandwidths.

Keywords

acceleration, gradient coil, gradient insert, magnetic resonance imaging, parallel imaging, quiet, silent, Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging

Citation

Versteeg, E, Klomp, D W J & Siero, J C W 2022, 'Accelerating Brain Imaging Using a Silent Spatial Encoding Axis', Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, vol. 88, no. 4, pp. 1785-1793. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.29350