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Abstract #3178

Lipid-targeted echo-planar spectroscopic imaging for in-vivo quantification of lipid composition

Dingyi Lin1, Yufan Zhou1, Shiyang You1, Jiaqiang Zhou2, Ke Zhou1, Yang Cao1, Chunli Cai3, Yi-Cheng Hsu4, and Min Wang1,2
1College of Biomedical Engineering & Instrument Science, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, 2Department of Endocrinology, School of Medicine Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, 3Chinese Academy of Sciences Hangzhou Institute of Medicine, Hangzhou, China, 4MR Collaboration, Siemens Healthcare Ltd, Shanghai, China

Synopsis

Keywords: Molecular Imaging, Metabolism, lipid composition; echo-planar spectroscopic imaging

Motivation: Investigating lipid composition in different tissues in vivo is essential. Demand exists for rapid, high-resolution chemical-shift imaging to analyze lipids.

Goal(s): We aimed to employ EPSI to simultaneously target lipid signals and suppress water, enabling precise in-vivo quantification of lipid composition in various tissues for the first time.

Approach: We implemented EPSI incorporating chemical-shift-selective adiabatic-refocusing pulses for lipid refocusing, with a full-automated pipeline for data reconstruction and lipid composition calculation.

Results: Phantom and in-vivo experiments validate the technique's effectiveness. The technique successfully differentiates various vegetable oils and lipid emulsions precisely and quantifies lipid composition with high spatial resolution in mice’s neck and abdomen.

Impact: Lipid-targeted EPSI technology surpasses traditional single-voxel spectroscopy or multi-echo chemical-shift water-fat imaging by providing higher spatial and spectral resolution, empowering researchers with deeper insights into lipid metabolism for future investigations.

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Keywords