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Abstract #5110

Enabling 1-minute High-resolution Clinical Diffusion-weighted Imaging at 7 Tesla via Improved Non-local-PCA Denoising

Zhe Zhang1, Xinyu Ye2, Xiaodong Ma3, Yuan Li4, Decai Tian5, Hua Guo6, Xiaoping Wu7, and Jing Jing1,5
1Tiantan Neuroimaging Center of Excellence, Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China, 2Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, FMRIB, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, 3Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States, 4MR Research Collaboration Team, Siemens Healthineers, Beijing, China, 5Department of Neurology, Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China, 6Center for Biomedical Imaging Research, Department of Biomedical Engineering, School of Medicine, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, 7Center for Magnetic Resonance Research, Radiology, Medical School, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States

Synopsis

Keywords: Diffusion Acquisition, Diffusion/other diffusion imaging techniques

Motivation: High-resolution diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) is crucial for diagnosing neurological pathologies, but traditionally requires long scan times due to low SNR, hindering its application in clinical settings.

Goal(s): To evaluate how our new non-local principal-component-analysis (PCA)-based denoising method can help achieve high-resolution DWI at 7 Tesla within a clinically viable timeframe.

Approach: We compared our method to two existing local-PCA-based approaches by collecting whole-brain DWI at 1.2-mm isotropic resolutions from a healthy volunteer and a patient with multiple sclerosis.

Results: Our non-local PCA method provided improved denoising performances, producing quality DWI where the lesion was identifiable even with 1-minute acquisition.

Impact: Demonstrated capable of enabling high-resolution DWI under 1-minute scan at 7 Tesla, our non-local PCA method is believed to promote the utility of DWI in clinical settings while having the potential to improve many other neuroimaging applications.

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