Dynamic diffusion-tensor measurements in muscle tissue using the single-line multiple-echo diffusion-tensor acquisition technique at 3T.

NMR Biomed

Bernard and Irene Schwartz Center for Biomedical Imaging, Department of Radiology, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.

Published: June 2015

When diffusion biomarkers display transient changes, i.e. in muscle following exercise, traditional diffusion-tensor imaging (DTI) methods lack the temporal resolution to resolve the dynamics. This article presents an MRI method for dynamic diffusion-tensor acquisitions on a clinical 3T scanner. This method, the Single-Line Multiple-Echo Diffusion-Tensor Acquisition Technique (SL-MEDITATE), achieves a high temporal resolution (4 s) by rapid diffusion encoding through the acquisition of multiple echoes with unique diffusion sensitization and limiting the readout to a single line volume. The method is demonstrated in a rotating anisotropic phantom, a flow phantom with adjustable flow speed and in vivo skeletal calf muscle of healthy volunteers following a plantar flexion exercise. The rotating and flow-varying phantom experiments show that SL-MEDITATE correctly identifies the rotation of the first diffusion eigenvector and the changes in diffusion-tensor parameter magnitudes, respectively. Immediately following exercise, the in vivo mean diffusivity (MD) time courses show, before the well-known increase, an initial decrease that is not typically observed in traditional DTI. In conclusion, SL-MEDITATE can be used to capture transient changes in tissue anisotropy in a single line. Future progress might allow for dynamic DTI when combined with appropriate k-space trajectories and compressed sensing reconstruction.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4433040PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/nbm.3296DOI Listing

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