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Calibration-free parallel transmission of the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spinal cord at 7T

Authors

  • C.S. Aigner
  • M.F. Sánchez Alarcon
  • A. D'Astous
  • E. Alonso-Ortiz
  • J. Cohen-Adad
  • S. Schmitter

Journal

  • Magnetic Resonance in Medicine

Citation

  • Magn Reson Med

Abstract

  • PURPOSE: To address the limitations of spinal cord imaging at ultra-high field (UHF) due to time-consuming parallel transmit (pTx) adjustments. This study introduces calibration-free offline computed universal shim modes that can be applied seamlessly for different pTx RF coils and spinal cord target regions, substantially enhancing spinal cord imaging efficiency at UHF. METHODS: A library of channel-wise relative B(+)(1) maps for the cervical spinal cord (six datasets) and thoracic and lumbar spinal cord (nine datasets) was constructed to optimize transmit homogeneity and efficiency for these regions. A tailored B0 shim was optimized for the cervical spine to enhance spatial magnetic field homogeneity further. The performance of the universal shims was validated using absolute saturation based B(+)(1) mapping and high-resolution 2D and 3D multi-echo gradient-recalled echo (GRE) data to assess the image quality. RESULTS: The proposed universal shims demonstrated a 50% improvement in B(+)(1) efficiency compared to the default (zero phase) shim mode. B(+)(1) homogeneity was also improved by 20%. The optimized universal shims achieved performance comparable to subject-specific pTx adjustments, while eliminating the need for lengthy pTx calibration times, saving about 10 min per experiment. CONCLUSION: The development of universal shims represents a significant advance by eliminating time-consuming subject-specific pTx adjustments. This approach is expected to make UHF spinal cord imaging more accessible and user-friendly, particularly for non-pTx experts.


DOI

doi:10.1002/mrm.30137