Cheng Ouyang1, Bradley P. Sutton1,2
1Bioengineering, University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, United States; 2Beckman
Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, United
States
Transfer
Insensitive Labeling Technique (TILT) has been used to measure cerebral blood
flow as a pulsed arterial spin labeling (PASL) method. With the
MT-insensitive feature, we propose to convert the original TILT to be further
developed into a novel non-flow-driven pulsed-continuous ASL technique, named
pulsed-continuous TILT (pTILT), with higher signal and fewer artifacts.
Simulation show comparable labeling efficiency of pTILT compared to the
current pulsed-continuous flow-driven adiabatic labeling techniques. In vivo
human perfusion measurements by pTILT agree with literature
Keywords