MEASUREMENT OF BLOOD VOLUME USING VELOCITY-SELECTIVE PULSE TRAINS ON MRI
20170293008 · 2017-10-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01R33/50
PHYSICS
G01R33/5607
PHYSICS
International classification
G01R33/50
PHYSICS
Abstract
The present invention is directed to a system and method for measuring blood volume using non-contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging. The method of the present invention includes a subtraction-based method using a pair of acquisitions immediately following velocity-sensitized pulse trains for the label module and its corresponding control module, respectively. The signal of static tissue is canceled out and the difference signal comes from the flowing blood compartment above a cutoff velocity. After normalizing to a proton density-weighted image acquired separately and scaled with the blood T1 and T2 relaxation factors, quantitative measurement of blood volume is then obtained.
Claims
1. A method for determining blood volume for a subject comprising: performing velocity-sensitized labeling modules with a magnetic resonance imaging scanner; embedding refocusing pulses between velocity-sensitive labeling modules; performing alternating velocity-encoding gradients, wherein the alternating velocity-encoding gradients are configured to suppress the signal of blood flowing above a cutoff velocity; performing a pair of acquisitions with the magnetic resonance imaging scanner; and determining blood volume from the subtraction of the pair of acquisitions, then scaled with the relaxation factors of blood T1 and T2.
2. The method of claim 1 further comprising using refocusing pulses comprising adiabatic pulses or composite pulses.
3. The method of claim 1 further comprising using a velocity-sensitized labeling module comprising ±90° pulses.
4. The method of claim 1 further comprising using alternating velocity-encoding gradients.
5. The method of claim 1 further comprising leaving a gap between each gradient and RF pulse to minimize the effect of eddy currents.
6. The method of claim 1 further comprising generating a non-contrast-enhanced MRI map of blood volume.
7. The method of claim 1 further comprising using velocity-selective (VS) pulse trains in paired control and label modules for separating vascular signal by subtraction.
8. The method of claim 1 further comprising leveraging a subtraction-based method using a pair of acquisitions immediately following velocity-sensitized pulse trains for a label module and its corresponding control module, respectively.
9. The method of claim 1 further comprising cancelling out a signal of static tissue and a resulting difference signal comes from the flowing blood compartment above a cutoff velocity.
10. The method of claim 1 further comprising normalizing to a proton density-weighted image acquired separately and scaled with the blood T1 and T2 relaxation factors and obtaining a quantitative measurement of blood volume.
11. A system for determining blood volume for a subject comprising: a magnetic resonance imager; and a non-transitory computer readable medium programmed for: performing velocity-sensitized labeling modules with a magnetic resonance imaging scanner; embedding refocusing pulses between velocity-sensitive labeling modules; performing alternating velocity-encoding gradients, wherein the alternating velocity-encoding gradients are configured to suppress the signal of blood flowing above a cutoff velocity; performing a pair of acquisitions with the magnetic resonance imaging scanner; and determining blood volume from the subtraction of the pair of acquisitions, then scaled with the relaxation factors of blood T1 and T2.
12. The system of claim 11 further comprising using refocusing pulses comprising adiabatic pulses or composite pulses.
13. The system of claim 11 further comprising using a velocity-sensitized labeling module comprising ±90° pulses.
14. The system of claim 11 further comprising using alternating velocity-encoding gradients.
15. The system of claim 11 further comprising leaving a gap between each gradient and RF pulse to minimize the effect of eddy currents.
16. The system of claim 11 further comprising generating a non-contrast-enhanced MRI map of blood volume.
17. The system of claim 11 further comprising using velocity-selective (VS) pulse trains in paired control and label modules for separating vascular signal by subtraction.
18. The system of claim 11 further comprising leveraging a subtraction-based method using a pair of acquisitions immediately following velocity-sensitized pulse trains for a label module and its corresponding control module, respectively.
19. The system of claim 11 further comprising cancelling out a signal of static tissue and a resulting difference signal comes from the flowing blood compartment above a cutoff velocity.
20. The system of claim 11 further comprising normalizing to a proton density-weighted image acquired separately and scaled with the blood T1 and T2 relaxation factors and obtaining a quantitative measurement of blood volume.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0020] The presently disclosed subject matter now will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying Drawings, in which some, but not all embodiments of the inventions are shown. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout. The presently disclosed subject matter may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will satisfy applicable legal requirements. Indeed, many modifications and other embodiments of the presently disclosed subject matter set forth herein will come to mind to one skilled in the art to which the presently disclosed subject matter pertains, having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated Drawings. Therefore, it is to be understood that the presently disclosed subject matter is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed and that modifications and other embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.
[0021] The present invention is directed to a system and method for determining blood volume in a subject. Blood volume is an important hemodynamic parameter for monitoring many disorders, such as stoke and cancer. Current MRI techniques for quantification of absolute blood volume for such clinical applications all require injecting exogenous contrast agents. To reduce associated safety risks and cost, the present invention is directed to a non-contrast-enhanced MRI method for blood volume mapping on MRI.
[0022] The present invention leverages a subtraction-based method using a pair of acquisitions immediately following velocity-sensitized pulse trains for the label module and its corresponding control module, respectively. The signal of static tissue is canceled out and the difference signal come from the flowing blood compartment above a cutoff velocity. After normalizing to a proton density-weighted image acquired separately and scaled with the blood T1 and T2 relaxation factors, quantitative measurement of blood volume is then obtained.
[0023] A basic velocity-sensitized labeling module includes ±90° pulses enclosing refocusing pulses surrounded by alternating velocity-encoding gradients which suppresses the signal of blood flowing above a cutoff velocity (Vc). In contrast, spins moving below the Vc, mainly the static ones, only experience the T2 weighting. A gap between each gradient and RF pulse is kept to minimize the effect of eddy currents. The corresponding control module can either keep the all the gradients but maintain velocity-compensated waveform and balanced diffusion weighting, or have gradients turned off for a velocity-insensitive waveform. The labeling/control modules are immediately followed by acquisitions.
[0024] In an exemplary implementation of the present method that is not meant to be considered limiting and is included simply as an illustration of the invention, a basic VS labeling module includes ±90° hard pulses enclosing a pair of refocusing pulses with surrounding velocity-encoding gradients, as illustrated in
[0025] When assuming laminar flow, the VS module saturates the signal of blood flowing above the cutoff velocity (Vc). In contrast, spins moving below the Vc, including the static tissue, only experience the T2 weighting during the TVS and diffusion weighting by the motion-sensitized gradients. The use of refocusing pulses with interleaved gradients in diffusion MRI reduces eddy currents. For the present invention, double refocused hyperbolic tangent (DRHT) pulses (5.0 ms, tan h/tan, maximum amplitude of 575 Hz and a frequency sweep of 8 kHz) were employed and compared with double refocused composite (DRCP) pulses (90°.sub.x180°.sub.y90°.sub.x, 1.7 ms); four alternating triangle gradient lobes with a ramp time of 1.6 ms and maximum amplitude of G.sub.VS=26 mT/m yield the Vc=3.5 mm/s, which is within the range of the velocities of capillary blood (1˜9 mm/s). At least a 4.0 ms gap between each gradient and following RF pulse is maintained to minimize the effect of eddy currents. For this VS module, T.sub.VS=40 ms, b.sub.VS=4.8 s/mm.sup.2.
[0026] For the corresponding control module, two negative gradient lobes were replaced with positive ones (dashed lines in
[0027] The pulse sequence diagram for measuring baseline CBV is shown in
[0028] Experiments were conducted on a 3T Philips Achieva scanner (Philips Medical Systems, Best, The Netherlands) using the body coil for RF transmission (maximum amplitude 13.5 μT) and a 32-channel head-only coil for signal reception. The combined maximum strength and slew rate of the standard gradient coil are 40 mT/m and 200 mT/m/ms, respectively.
[0029] Similar to previous VS-ASL studies, a spherical silicone oil phantom (T1/T2=1111/227 ms) was scanned to evaluate the effects of eddy currents and other gradient imperfections. The sequence without CSF nulling modules was applied with 2D acquisition for 10 slices and the parameters were identical with the human studies detailed below. The gradients of the VS pulse trains were applied along the left-right (L-R), anterior-posterior (A-P), or superior-inferior (S-I) direction. VS pulse trains using either DRHT or DRCP were examined, at both Vc=3.5 mm/s (described above) and 2.0 mm/s (3.2 ms duration of each trapezoidal gradient lobe, 0.7 ms ramp time and maximum amplitude of G.sub.VS=30 mT/m). Using a TR=4.0 s, the total measurement time after 24 repetitions was about 3.4 min for each pulse train configuration. Proton density-weighted image of signal intensity (SI.sub.PD) was also acquired with TR=10 s. The averaged signal difference for the label/control pairs across repetitions were normalized to the SI.sub.PD image. For each pulse train configuration, the mean and standard deviation (SD) of the normalized differences from all the pixels within the phantom were calculated.
[0030] Six healthy volunteers (30-41 yrs old, three males and three females) were enrolled after providing informed consent in accordance with the Institutional Review Board guidelines. In this study, 2D multi-slice single-shot echo-planar imaging (EPI) was performed in axial planes. Acquisition parameters: the transverse field of view (FOV) was 186×213 mm.sup.2 with 10 slices acquired at a slice thickness of 4.4 mm without gaps; the acquisition resolution was 3.3×3.5 mm.sup.2 and the reconstructed voxel size was 1.9×1.9 mm.sup.2; phase encoding was along the A-P direction with the EPI factor (the number of k-space lines collected per echo train) of 25 and sensitivity encoding (SENSE) factor of 2.5; the echo train duration per slice was 14.0 ms and the effective echo time (TE) was 8.7 ms. For sequences with the CSF-nulling modules, the repetition time (TR) was 7.7 s, and the total measurement time after 24 averages of interleaved label and control was about 6.4 min.
[0031] On each volunteer, four scans with Vc=3.5 mm/s were included: Exp. (1), velocity-compensated control with CSF-nulling; Exp. (2), velocity-insensitive control with CSF-nulling; Exp. (3), velocity-compensated control without CSF-nulling; Exp. (4), repeat Exp. (3) with an extra T2prep module (DRHT, TEprep=300 ms) before VS pulse train to suppress blood signal and visualize signal from CSF. On a subset of five subjects, Exp. (1) was repeated with Vc=30.0 mm/s (G.sub.VS=3 mT/m), 5.0 mm/s (G.sub.VS=18 mT/m) and 2.0 mm/s (described in the phantom experiments) as Exp. (5)-(7), respectively. These different scans were randomly ordered and all participants were instructed to keep still with their head stabilized with foam pads.
[0032] In addition, a proton density-weighted image (SI.sub.PD) (TR=10 s) was acquired for CBV quantification purposes (0.3 min); a double inversion recovery (DIR) image was obtained to visualize gray matter only (TR=10 s; TI_1=3.58 s; TI_2=0.48 s; 0.3 min); a scan with an extra T2prep module (DRHT, TEprep=300 ms) before acquisition was carried to suppress tissue signal and visualize signal from CSF (TR=5.5 s, 0.2 min). All of these images were collected with the same resolution and acquisition scheme.
[0033] Experimental data were processed using Matlab (MathWorks, Inc., Natick, Mass., USA). For tissue or blood, the contrast weightings by T.sub.1, T.sub.2 and ADC are given by:
M(T.sub.1)=1−exp(−T.sub.recover/T.sub.1) [1]
M(T.sub.2)=exp(−T.sub.VS/T.sub.2) [2]
M(ADC)=exp(−b.Math.ADC) [3]
For the control sequence where both the tissue (t) and blood (b) signal are preserved, the signal intensity of a voxel can be described as the sum of multiple compartments with weightings of their particular T.sub.1/T.sub.2 and apparent diffusion constants (ADC):
SI.sub.control=SI.sub.PD.Math.(1−x.sub.b).Math.M(T.sub.1,t).Math.M(T.sub.2,t).Math.M(ADC.sub.t)+SI.sub.PD.Math.x.sub.b.Math.Σ(x.sub.i.Math.M(T.sub.1,i).Math.M(T.sub.2,i).Math.M(ADC.sub.i)) [4]
in which x.sub.b is the water fraction of the blood in the voxel and CBV=100.Math.λ.Math.x.sub.b. The CBV unit is mL blood/100 g tissue and λ is the brain-blood partition coefficient, 0.9 mL blood/g tissue. x.sub.i is the fraction of CBV in each microvessel compartment: arteriolar (a), capillary (cp) and venular (v).
Ideally, VS pulse trains in the labeling module suppress all the blood signal and only tissue signal is retained. However, with different flowing velocities in individual segments of the microvasculature and also limited gradient performance on the clinical scanners, the percentage of blood being suppressed in each microvascular compartment, or the labeling efficiency a.sub.i, varies with the VS pulse trains applying at different Vc. So for each labeled counterpart, realistically, the signal intensity still has contributions from unsuppressed blood:
SI.sub.label=SI.sub.PD.Math.(1−x.sub.b).Math.M(T.sub.1,t).Math.M(T.sub.2,t).Math.M(ADC.sub.t)+SI.sub.PD.Math.x.sub.b.Math.Σ(x.sub.i.Math.(1−a.sub.i).Math.M(T.sub.1,i).Math.M(T.sub.2,i).Math.M(ADC.sub.i)) [5]
And the subtraction of the control and label signal intensities is:
SI.sub.control−SI.sub.label=SI.sub.PD.Math.x.sub.b.Math.Σ(x.sub.i.Math.a.sub.i.Math.M(T.sub.1,i).Math.M(T.sub.2,i).Math.M(ADC.sub.i)) [6]
Note that diffusion weighting by the motion-sensitized gradient can be omitted for the blood signal due to the rather small b-value used (<7 s/mm.sup.2). Thus the CBV can be calculated as this difference normalized by the SI.sub.PD image and a scaling factor related only to T.sub.1 and T.sub.2 of each blood compartment:
[0034] In order to have a plausible account of x.sub.i and a.sub.i for each compartment, a previous microcirculation model was derived using available morphological and physiological information, which consisted of 11 microvessel compartments with their respective volume fractions and velocities. For arteriolar, capillary and venular blood, x.sub.a=0.21, x.sub.cp=0.33, x.sub.v=0.46, as used before. Furthermore, the calculation of the Vc-specific labeling efficiency for each compartment was based on the projections of the 3-dimensional isotropic orientations of microvessels onto a single axis using a spherical coordinate. When the projected velocity was larger than Vc, it was considered being suppressed and the labeling efficiency a for the given velocity and Vc was computed as the ratio of the number of suppressed ones (label) to the total number of vessels (control). The compartmental volume fractions, velocities and labeling efficiencies for Vc=[0.5, 2.0, 3.5, 5.0] mm/s are listed in Table 1. The distributions of blood signal for the control and labeled conditions, out of the total blood volume, are illustrated in both the 11-compartment model (
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Simulated Labeling Efficiencies of Velocity-Selective Pulse Trains with Different Cutoff Velocities (Vc) Along a Single Direction, for Individual Compartments with Various Flow Velocities Along Isotropic Orientations.sup.a Arteriolar (a) Capillary (cp) Venular (v) a5 a4 a3 a2 a1 cp v1 v2 v3 v4 v5 Fraction of 0.04 0.04 0.04 0.04 0.05 0.33 0.10 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 CBV (x.sub.1) 0.21 0.33 0.46 Velocity (mm/s) 48.0 24.0 12.5 8.3 4.3 0.7 1.9 3.7 5.6 10.7 21.3 Vc (mm/s) Labeling efficiency in each microvessel compartment (α.sub.1) 0.5 87% 94% 90% 87% 78% 20% 60% 76% 82% 89% 94% 89% 20% 80% 2.0 90% 83% 72% 62% 40% 0% 0% 33% 50% 69% 82% 70% 0% 48% 3.5 85% 74% 58% 44% 13% 0% 0% 3% 26% 53% 72% 55% 0% 31% 5.0 80% 66% 46% 28% 0% 0% 0% 0% 7% 40% 63% 44% 0% 22% .sup.aThese are calculated based on a morphological and physiological microcirculation model consisting of 11 microvessel compartments in arteriolar, capillary, and venular blood.
T.sub.1,a and T.sub.1,v at 3T were taken as 1.84 s and 1.70 s. Using the previously measured relationship between T.sub.2, oxygenation fraction (Y) and hematocrit (Hct) in blood samples, T.sub.2,a and T.sub.2,v were set to be 138 ms and 53 ms for the employed inter-echo spacing of the VS pulse train (τ.sub.CPMG=20 ms) and Y.sub.a=0.98, Y.sub.v=0.6, Hct=0.42 were assumed for a typical healthy adult. Voxel-wise mean CBV maps from the CBV time courses measured repeatedly (24 times) and temporal SNR maps (ratio of the mean value to the SD of the CBV time courses) were produced for all the scans. For each subject, a binary gray matter mask (GM) was obtained from the DIR image using an empirical threshold and a ROI within the white matter (WM) was drawn manually using the SI.sub.PD image. In addition, voxels with large vessels were identified, through thresholding the CBV map (>12.5 mL/100 g, as used in as 2.5 times of the mean CBV) acquired in Exp. 2 with the velocity-insensitive control and CSF-nulling. These were excluded for the calculation of the averaged CBV within GM under different methods. Averaged CBV and SNR values from GM and WM ROIs were calculated for each experiment.
[0035]
[0036]
[0037] The CBV maps and SNR images from Exp. (1)-(3) of the 5th slice of all 6 subjects are arrayed in
[0038] Averaged CBV and SNR values within GM masks and WM ROIs and their GM/WM ratios are reported in Table 2 for Exp. (1)-(3) and (6). For Vc=3.5 mm/s and with CSF-nulling, the averaged local CBV values from Exp. (1) with velocity-compensated control were 5.1±0.6 and 2.4±0.2 mL/100 g for GM and WM, respectively, which were 23% and 32% lower than those from Exp. 2 with velocity-insensitive control. The averaged temporal SNR values for GM and WM from Exp. 1 were 29% and 25% lower than the corresponding ones from Exp. 2, and 14% lower compared to Exp. 3 without CSF-nulling, about. The averaged temporal SNR values from Exp. 6 (Vc=5.0 mm/s) were 25% and 33% lower than those from Exp. 1 (Vc=3.5 mm/s) for GM and WM, respectively, indicating reduced signal available for higher Vc.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Averaged CBV and Temporal SNR Values (Mean ± SD, n = 6) in GM and WM ROIs and Their GM/WM Ratios of Different Experiments Using Vc = 3.5 mm/s (Exps. 1-3) and Vc = 5.0 mm/s (Exp. 6) CBV (mL/100 g) SNR GM WM ratio GM WM ratio Exp. 1, Vc = 3.5 mm/s, velocity- 5.1 ± 0.6 2.4 ± 0.2 2.1 1.2 ± 0.3 0.6 ± 0.1 2.0 compensated control, with CSF-nulling Exp. 2, Vc = 3.5 mm/s, velocity- 5.5 ± 0.4 3.5 ± 0.4 1.9 1.7 ± 0.3 0.8 ± 0.1 2.1 insensitive control, with CSF-nulling Exp. 3, Vc = 3.5 mm/s, velocity- 5.2 ± 0.4 2.4 ± 0.2 2.2 1.4 ± 0.3 0.7 ± 0.1 2.0 compensated control, without CSF-nulling Exp. 6, Vc = 5.0 mm/s, velocity- 5.9 ± 0.7 2.2 ± 0.3 2.7 0.9 ± 0.2 0.4 ± 0.1 2.3 compensated control, with CSF-nulling
[0039] Absolute CBV maps were obtained from pulse sequences with interleaved control and label modules for separating vascular signal. A proton density weighted image (SI.sub.PD) was used for normalization, similar to ASL for CBF mapping. Several technical issues of this subtraction-based method for CBV quantification remain to be considered.
[0040] The obtained CBV contrast is qualitatively similar to typical DSC-MRI results. After being corrected using the simulated labeling efficiencies for the different microvascular compartments, the mean CBV values in GM and WM using velocity-compensated controls (5.1 mL/100 g and 2.4 mL/100 g) are comparable to those reported in literature with different imaging modalities. However, the labeling efficiencies of the applied VS pulse train (Vc=3.5 mm/s) are still relatively low for the microvessel compartments, especially in and close to the capillaries (Table 1), where blood moves as slow as 1.0 mm/s. Capillary blood is known to occupy approximately 33% of total CBV and most of it was not labeled here. With the current technique demonstrated for CBV estimation, the signal from arteriolar and venular compartments being detected is therefore only around 1% of the signal in the tissue (using the simulated labeling efficiency for Vc=3.5 mm/s and ignoring T1/T2 relaxations): within CBV, 0.55×21%+0.31×46%=25.8%; within tissue, 25.8%×5.0%=1.3%). This is similar to the ASL effect size for CBF mapping, thus providing similar spatial and temporal resolution, for both clinical and fMRI applications. Indeed, the mean temporal SNR values (1.2 in GM and 0.6 in WM) are close to the recently recorded values for velocity- and acceleration-selective ASL methods. Ideally, if a Vc slower than capillary blood can be used, labeling efficiency will be much higher and uniform across different microvessel compartments, as indicated in Table 1. This would also reduce the need for the assumed compartmental model. Utilizing a smaller Vc value on clinical scanners is limited by the gradient performance (maximal strength, slew rate and eddy current), which can potentially be improved by more advanced gradient system design.
[0041] In addition to the various velocities in each compartment, another assumption of the adopted microvasculature model for calculating the labeling efficiency is that of isotropic orientations for the large number of vessels. Since the numbers of different vessels are for the whole brain (about 700,000 mm.sup.3, assuming these vessels occupying 5% of the parenchyma), scaling down for the voxel size used in this study (50 mm.sup.3) leads to [2, 14, 107, 364, 2793, 54992, 2793, 364, 107, 14, 2] vessels in [a5, a4, a3, a2, a1, cp, v1, v2, v3, v4, v5] per voxel, respectively. Given that there are a large number of vessels in most compartments (except a5, a4, v4, and v5), isotropic orientation seems to be a reasonable assumption for the majority of microvessels.
[0042] Although the pair of velocity-selective labeling and velocity-compensated control modules appear with balanced gradient lobes (
[0043] Another difference between the two control methods was the amount of signal from large vessels being detected. It was later realized that the velocity-compensated pulse train for the control was actually acceleration-sensitive with a cutoff acceleration (Ac) of 0.57 m/s.sup.2. Acceleration-selective ASL with similar Ac values has recently been demonstrated for CBF measurement. Thus pulsatile flow in large vessels would also cause blood suppression in the velocity-compensated control and lead to signal reduction in the final CBV images, whereas the velocity-insensitive control remains insensitive to acceleration and maintains the large vessel signal.
[0044] The calculated CBV values (Eq. [7]) depend on the T.sub.1 and T.sub.2 values of each microvessel compartment, which are functions of Hct and Y and can be estimated for each subject. Note that the Hct values in microvascular segments are known to be approximately 75%-88% of that for large vessels (Fahraeus effect). If Hct=0.42×0.80=0.34 were used in the calculations, T.sub.1,a, T.sub.1,v (1.84 s, 1.70 s) should be increased by about 5% and T.sub.2,a, T.sub.2,v (138 ms, 53 ms) by about 10%. Raising the selected T.sub.1,a, T.sub.1,v and T.sub.2,a, T.sub.2,v for [+5%, +10%] would change CBV with [2.7%, 5.5%] and [−2.3%, −4.4%], respectively, assuming the other one unchanged.
[0045] Pulsatile CSF flow was found to generate signal in the CBV maps not only within ventricles but also in subarachnoid space (
[0046] To demonstrate the efficacy of the adiabatic refocusing pulses described herein, numerical simulations using the Bloch equations based on matrix rotation were conducted using Matlab (MathWorks, Inc., Natick, Mass., USA). The sensitivity to a typical range of B0/B1 offset incurred in the brain at 3T (B0 field: ±200 Hz; B1+scale (ratio of actual flip angle to nominal input flip angle): from 0.8 to 1.2) was evaluated for a T.sub.2prep module (the VS labeling module without gradients) with refocusing pulses employing: 1) double refocused hyperbolic tangent (DRHT) pulses and 2) double refocused composite (DRCP) pulses. The maximum amplitude of the nominal RF pulse is assumed to be 13.5 uT (575 Hz), as the body coil of the scanner specifies. Since T1/T2 effects are not considered, longitudinal magnetization Mz lower than 1.0 are resulted from errors in refocusing. For each pulse train, M.sub.z responses to different B.sub.0 off-resonance frequencies and B.sub.1+scales are simulated. Compared to DRCP pulses, DRHT pulses are shown to yield sufficient refocusing in various B0/B1 conditions.
[0047]
[0048] The present invention provides, as described above, a novel non-contrast-enhanced method for quantifying absolute CBV values using velocity-selective spin labeling approach was developed at 3T. The technical feasibility was demonstrated and the quantified CBV values of gray matter and white matter of healthy subjects were consistent with literature reports. Further optimization of this reported technique is needed to boost the CBV signal, especially from the vessels with very slow flow, e.g. capillary. Furthermore, this technique is not limited to brain perfusion mapping and can be readily extended to measure blood volume in other parts of the body.
[0049] It should be noted that the pulse sequences, imaging protocols, described herein can be executed with a program(s) fixed on one or more non-transitory computer readable medium. The non-transitory computer readable medium can be loaded onto a computing device, server, imaging device processor, smartphone, tablet, phablet, or any other suitable device known to or conceivable by one of skill in the art.
[0050] It should also be noted that herein the steps of the method described can be carried out using a computer, non-transitory computer readable medium, or alternately a computing device, microprocessor, or other computer type device independent of or incorporated with an imaging or signal collection device. An independent computing device can be networked together with the imaging device either with wires or wirelessly. The computing device for executing the present invention can be a completely unique computer designed especially for the implementation of this method. Indeed, any suitable method of analysis known to or conceivable by one of skill in the art could be used. It should also be noted that while specific equations are detailed herein, variations on these equations can also be derived, and this application includes any such equation known to or conceivable by one of skill in the art.
[0051] A non-transitory computer readable medium is understood to mean any article of manufacture that can be read by a computer. Such non-transitory computer readable media includes, but is not limited to, magnetic media, such as a floppy disk, flexible disk, hard disk, reel-to-reel tape, cartridge tape, cassette tape or cards, optical media such as CD-ROM, writable compact disc, magneto-optical media in disc, tape or card form, and paper media, such as punched cards and paper tape.
[0052] The many features and advantages of the invention are apparent from the detailed specification, and thus, it is intended by the appended claims to cover all such features and advantages of the invention which fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. Further, since numerous modifications and variations will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is not desired to limit the invention to the exact construction and operation illustrated and described, and accordingly, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be resorted to, falling within the scope of the invention.