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Abstract #3919

Motion compensated SE diffusion tensor cardiovascular magnetic resonance at ultra-high gradient strength at Connectom scanner

Shubhajit Paul1,2, Pedro F. Ferreira1,2, John Evans3, Camila Munoz Escobar1,2, Fabrizio Fasano3,4, Dudley J. Pennell1,2, Sonia F. Nielles-Vallespin1,2, and Andrew D. Scott1,2
1National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom, 2Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Unit, The Royal Brompton Hospital, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom, 3Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre (CUBRIC), Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom, 4Siemens Healthcare Ltd, Camberly, United Kingdom

Synopsis

Keywords: Gradients, Diffusion/other diffusion imaging techniques

Motivation: Second-order motion-compensated spin-echo (MCSE) DT-CMR is limited by long echo-times (TE), resulting in T2-related signal-loss.

Goal(s): Use the ultrahigh gradient-strength of the Connectom scanner to reduce TE of second-order MCSE DT-CMR.

Approach: A second-order MCSE DT-CMR pulse-sequence was developed. Ultra-high (180mT/m) and a high gradient-strength (80mT/m) were compared in acquiring in-vivo DT-CMR data at two cardiac phases.

Results: The substantial reduction in TE enabled by ultra-high gradient-strength resulted in improvements in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in both cardiac phases. To our knowledge this is the first report comparing the performance of second-order MCSE DT-CMR at ultra-high gradient-strength (Connectom) to widely available high gradient-strengths.

Impact: Second-order MCSE DT-CMR acquired using ultra-high diffusion gradient strengths increases SNR in both cardiac phases, paving the way for future clinical translation of efficient multiphase DT-CMR.

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Keywords