AI Article Synopsis

  • In vivo phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy (P MRS) is a non-invasive tool for studying energy metabolism, but it faces sensitivity issues compared to proton MRS due to a lower gyromagnetic ratio.
  • Recent studies show that using high dielectric constant (HDC) materials can enhance MRI signals and reduce RF power needs, particularly benefiting P MRS at lower frequencies.
  • An experiment using ultra-high dielectric constant (uHDC) materials at 7.0T demonstrated improved sensitivity and reduced power requirements for detecting X-nuclei, suggesting a promising approach for MRI and MRS applications that minimizes tissue heating.

Article Abstract

In vivoP MRS provides a unique and important imaging tool for studying high-energy phosphate metabolism and bioenergetics noninvasively. However, compared to H MRS, P MRS with a relatively low gyromagnetic ratio (γ) has a lower and limited sensitivity even at ultrahigh field. The proof of concept has been recently demonstrated that the use of high dielectric constant (HDC) materials between RF coil and object sample could increase MRI signal and reduce required RF transmission power for reaching the same RF pulse flip angle in the region of interest. For low-γ MRS applications operated at relatively lower frequency, however, it demands the dielectric materials with a much higher permittivity for achieving optimal performance. We conducted a P MRS imaging study using ultra-HDC (uHDC; with a relative permittivity of ~1200) material blocks incorporated with an RF volume coil at ultrahigh field of 7.0T. The experimental results from phantom and human calf muscle demonstrate that the uHDC technique significantly enhanced RF magnetic transmit field (B) and reception field (B) and the gain could reach up to two folds in the tissue near the uHDC blocks. The overall results indicate that the incorporation of the uHDC materials having an appropriate permittivity value with a RF coil can significantly increase detection sensitivity and reduces RF transmission power for X-nuclei MRS applications at ultrahigh field. The uHDC technology could provide an efficient, cost-effective engineering solution for achieving high detection sensitivity and concurrently minimizing tissue heating concern for human MRS and MRI applications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5961500PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mri.2017.07.019DOI Listing

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