An accelerated PETALUTE MRI sequence for in vivo quantification of sodium content in human articular cartilage at 3T

Author:

Villarreal Cameron X.,Shen Xin,Alhulail Ahmad A.,Buffo Nicholas M.,Zhou Xiaopeng,Pogue Evan,Özen Ali Caglar,Chiew Mark,Sawiak Stephen,Emir Uzay,Chan Deva D.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Objective In this work, we evaluate the sodium magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) capabilities of a three-dimensional (3D) dual-echo ultrashort echo time (UTE) sequence with a novel rosette petal trajectory (PETALUTE), in comparison to the 3D density-adapted (DA) radial spokes UTE sequence in human articular cartilage in the knee. Materials and methods We scanned five healthy subjects using a 3D dual-echo PETALUTE acquisition and two comparable implementations of 3D DA-radial spokes acquisitions, one matching the number of k-space projections (Radial – Matched Spokes) and the other matching the total number of samples (Radial – Matched Samples) acquired in k-space. Results The PETALUTE acquisition enabled equivalent sodium quantification in articular cartilage volumes of interest (168.8 ± 29.9 mM, mean ± standard deviation) to those derived from the 3D radial acquisitions (171.62 ± 28.7 mM and 149.8 ± 22.2 mM, respectively). We achieved a 41% shorter scan time of 2:06 for 3D PETALUTE, compared to 3:36 for 3D radial acquisitions. We also evaluated the feasibility of further acceleration of the PETALUTE sequence through retrospective compressed sensing with 2 × and 4 × acceleration of the first echo and showed structural similarity of 0.89 ± 0.03 and 0.87 ± 0.03 when compared to non-retrospectively accelerated reconstruction. Conclusion We demonstrate improved scan time with equivalent performance using a 3D dual-echo PETALUTE sequence compared to the 3D DA-radial sequence for sodium MRI of articular cartilage.

Funder

Office of Extramural Research, National Institutes of Health

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Division of Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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