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Water and lipid suppression techniques for advanced <sup>1</sup>H MRS and MRSI of the human brain: Experts' consensus recommendations

Ivan Tkáč, Dinesh K. Deelchand, Wolfgang Dreher, Hoby P. Hetherington, Roland Kreis, Chathura Kumaragamage, Michal Považan, Daniel M. Spielman, Bernhard Strasser, Robin A. de Graaf

2020NMR in Biomedicine87 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The neurochemical information provided by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) or MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) can be severely compromised if strong signals originating from brain water and extracranial lipids are not properly suppressed. The authors of this paper present an overview of advanced water/lipid‐suppression techniques and describe their advantages and disadvantages. Moreover, they provide recommendations for choosing the most appropriate techniques for proper use. Methods of water signal handling are primarily focused on the VAPOR technique and on MRS without water suppression (metabolite cycling). The section on lipid‐suppression methods in MRSI is divided into three parts. First, lipid‐suppression techniques that can be implemented on most clinical MR scanners (volume preselection, outer‐volume suppression, selective lipid suppression) are described. Second, lipid‐suppression techniques utilizing the combination of k‐space filtering, high spatial resolutions and lipid regularization are presented. Finally, three promising new lipid‐suppression techniques, which require special hardware (a multi‐channel transmit system for dynamic B 1 + shimming, a dedicated second‐order gradient system or an outer volume crusher coil) are introduced.

Topics & Concepts

Proton magnetic resonanceMagnetic resonance spectroscopic imagingNeurochemicalComputer scienceMetaboliteVolume (thermodynamics)Nuclear magnetic resonanceChemistryMagnetic resonance imagingPhysicsNeuroscienceBiologyBiochemistryMedicineRadiologyQuantum mechanicsAdvanced MRI Techniques and ApplicationsAdvanced NMR Techniques and ApplicationsLanthanide and Transition Metal Complexes
Water and lipid suppression techniques for advanced <sup>1</sup>H MRS and MRSI of the human brain: Experts' consensus recommendations | Litcius