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Abstract #4700

Tissue water referencing for 7T MRSI: Integrating proton density maps into quantitative metabolic mapping

Ahmet Azgın1,2, Barbara Dymerska3, Martina Callaghan3, Philipp Lazen1,2, Lukas Hingerl2, Bernhard Strasser2, Wolfgang Bogner2,4, Karl Rössler1,4, Siegfried Trattnig2,4,5, and Gilbert Hangel1,2
1Department of Neurosurgery, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria, 2High-field MR Center, Department of Biomedical Imaging and Image-guided Therapy, Medical University of Vienna, Wien, Austria, 3Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging, Department of Imaging Neuroscience, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, United Kingdom, 4Christian Doppler Laboratory for MR Imaging Biomarkers, Vienna, Austria, 5Institute for Clinical Molecular MRI, Karl Landsteiner Society, St. Poelten, Austria

Synopsis

Keywords: Spectroscopy, Brain, 7T, MRSI, Concentration Estimates

Motivation: In magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging, generating concentration estimates is desirable. So far, our approach has been limited by the need for WM/GM separation and literature values, limiting it to healthy subjects. To solve this, it can be replaced by PD map-based references.

Goal(s): To test an approach of calculating concentration estimates within volunteers without relying on literature assumptions for reference.

Approach: Use quantitative proton density maps to calculate water concentration maps for metabolic imaging at 7T.

Results: We successfully used ME-GRE imaging to calculate water concentration maps. In healthy volunteers, these maps correspond well to the previous method.

Impact: Using tissue water maps for MRSI concentration estimation allows to not only apply the method to healthy brains, but also to pathologies like gliomas. This will make 7T MRSI a better tool for studies.

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