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Abstract #3304

Improved physiology-induced temporal stability achieved with variable-flip-angle FLEET multi-shot Echo Planar Time-resolved Imaging (EPTI)

Zhangxuan Hu1,2, Avery J.L. Berman1,2,3,4, Zijing Dong1,2, William A. Grissom5, Timothy G. Reese1,2, Fuyixue Wang1,2, Lawrence L. Wald1,2,6, and Jonathan R. Polimeni1,2,6
1Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States, 2Department of Radiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States, 3Department of Physics, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON, Canada, 4University of Ottawa Institute of Mental Health Research, Royal Ottawa, Mental Health Centre, Ottawa, ON, Canada, 5Department of Biomedical Engineering, Case School of Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States, 6Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States

Synopsis

Keywords: fMRI Acquisition, fMRI

Motivation: EPTI is a new highly-efficient imaging approach that addresses limitations of EPI by providing high-resolution distortion- and blurring-free imaging for fMRI. However, shot-to-shot phase-variations induced by physiological processes in conventional multi-shot EPTI can introduce instabilities into the reconstructed time-series data.

Goal(s): Improving physiology-induced temporal stability of multi-shot EPTI.

Approach: Combing multi-shot EPTI with the VFA-FLEET method, which minimizes shot-to-shot phase-variations by reordering the multi-shot acquisitions while maximizing the signal level by using a variable-flip-angle train and recursive RF pulse design.

Results: In vivo fMRI data acquired at 7T demonstrate that the physiological instabilities of multi-shot EPTI can be substantially reduced with proposed method.

Impact: Here we test whether temporal instabilities in conventional multi-shot EPTI time-series caused by physiological variability can be reduced by combining EPTI with the variable-flip-angle FLEET method. This combination can improve the usability and robustness of EPTI for high-resolution fMRI studies.

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Keywords