Cancers (Mar 2024)

Enhancing Whole-Brain Magnetic Field Homogeneity for 3D-Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Imaging with a Novel Unified Coil: A Preliminary Study

  • Archana Vadiraj Malagi,
  • Xinqi Li,
  • Na Zhang,
  • Yucen Liu,
  • Yuheng Huang,
  • Fardad Michael Serry,
  • Ziyang Long,
  • Chia-Chi Yang,
  • Yujie Shan,
  • Yubin Cai,
  • Jeremy Zepeda,
  • Nader Binesh,
  • Debiao Li,
  • Hsin-Jung Yang,
  • Hui Han

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16061233
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. 1233

Abstract

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The spectral quality of magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) can be affected by strong magnetic field inhomogeneities, posing a challenge for 3D-MRSI’s widespread clinical use with standard scanner-equipped 2nd-order shim coils. To overcome this, we designed an empirical unified shim–RF head coil (32-ch RF receive and 51-ch shim) for 3D-MRSI improvement. We compared its shimming performance and 3D-MRSI brain coverages against the standard scanner shim (2nd-order spherical harmonic (SH) shim coils) and integrated parallel reception, excitation, and shimming (iPRES) 32-ch AC/DC head coil. We also simulated a theoretical 3rd-, 4th-, and 5th-order SH shim as a benchmark to assess the UNIfied shim–RF coil (UNIC) improvements. In this preliminary study, the whole-brain coverage was simulated by using B0 field maps of twenty-four healthy human subjects (n = 24). Our results demonstrated that UNIC substantially improves brain field homogeneity, reducing whole-brain frequency standard deviations by 27% compared to the standard 2nd-order scanner shim and 17% compared to the iPRES shim. Moreover, UNIC enhances whole-brain coverage of 3D-MRSI by up to 34% compared to the standard 2nd-order scanner shim and up to 13% compared to the iPRES shim. UNIC markedly increases coverage in the prefrontal cortex by 147% and 47% and in the medial temporal lobe and temporal pole by 29% and 13%, respectively, at voxel resolutions of 1.4 cc and 0.09 cc for 3D-MRSI. Furthermore, UNIC effectively reduces variations in shim quality and brain coverage among different subjects compared to scanner shim and iPRES shim. Anticipated advancements in higher-order shimming (beyond 6th order) are expected via optimized designs using dimensionality reduction methods.

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