Automated single‐voxel proton MRS: technical development and multisite verification

PG Webb, N Sailasuta, SJ Kohler… - Magnetic …, 1994 - Wiley Online Library
PG Webb, N Sailasuta, SJ Kohler, T Raidy, RA Moats, R Hurd
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1994Wiley Online Library
To improve clinical utility, an integrated method has been developed to automatically
acquire and process single‐voxel in vivo proton spectra on a 1.5 T clinical scanner. This
method includes automated adjustment of linear shims using a very rapid modified simplex
method, automated water suppression, and applies a water referencing scheme to correct
for phase and residual eddy current effects. No operator intervention is required for the
acquisition and processing of these pure‐absorption spectra. This method was tested in a …
Abstract
To improve clinical utility, an integrated method has been developed to automatically acquire and process single‐voxel in vivo proton spectra on a 1.5 T clinical scanner. This method includes automated adjustment of linear shims using a very rapid modified simplex method, automated water suppression, and applies a water referencing scheme to correct for phase and residual eddy current effects. No operator intervention is required for the acquisition and processing of these pure‐absorption spectra. This method was tested in a preliminary multisite trial to determine intersite and intrasite variability of metabolite ratio measurements. In a sample of over 100 examinations, the standard deviation of the ratios NAA:Cr, Cho:Cr, and ml:Cr were found to be under 15% when using this method, a substantially narrower range than has been found In studies relying on manual adjustment of the instrument and/or manual processing. This result indicates that automated setting of acquisition and processing parameters is of critical importance in the clinical application of in vivo spectroscopy.
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