Data acquisition strategies to reduce cardiac-induced noise in brain maps of R2* and magnetic susceptibility

Author:

Raynaud QuentinORCID,Dardano ThomasORCID,Oliveira Rita,Di Domenicantonio GiuliaORCID,Kober Tobias,Roy Christopher W.ORCID,van Heeswijk Ruud B.ORCID,Lutti AntoineORCID

Abstract

AbstractPurposeCardiac pulsation increases the noise level in brain MR images. Maps of the transverse relaxation rate R2* and magnetic susceptibility (QSM) are particularly affected by cardiac-induced noise as they are computed from gradient-echo data acquired at multiple echo times. Here, we introduce two data acquisition strategies to mitigate the impact of cardiac-induced noise in brain maps of R2* and QSM.MethodsThe proposed strategies are based on the higher level of cardiac-induced noise near the k-space centre. Using a pseudo-spiral sampling trajectory, the first strategy allows for the acquisition of a specific number of averages at each k-space location, set from the local level of cardiac-induced noise. The second strategy synchronizes the acquisition with the cardiac cycle in real time. We compared in 10 healthy volunteers, the variability of data acquired across 4 repetitions and in the same session, using both strategies and with a standard linear trajectory.ResultsCompared to linear sampling, the pseudo-spiral trajectory reduced the variability of R2* and QSM maps across repetitions by 26/28/22% and 19/18/16% in the brainstem/cerebellum/whole brain, for a 14% increase in scan time. The pseudo-spiral sampling also reduced the level of aliasing artifacts from pulsating blood vessels. The cardiac-triggered trajectory did not reduce the variability of R2* or QSM maps.ConclusionPseudo-spiral k-space trajectories can be designed to mitigate cardiac-induced noise in brain maps of the MRI parameters R2* and QSM. Synchronization of the acquisition with the cardiac cycle in real time did not lead to any reduction in cardiac-induced noise.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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