C magnetic resonance spectroscopy is a viable, non-invasive method to study cell metabolism in skeletal muscles. However, MR sensitivity of C is inherently low, which can be overcome by applying a higher static magnetic field strength together with radiofrequency coil arrays instead of single loop coils or large volume coils, and H decoupling, which leads to a simplified spectral pattern. H-decoupled C-MRS requires RF coils which support both, H and C, Larmor frequencies with sufficient electromagnetic isolation between the pathways of the two frequencies. We present the development, evaluation, and first in vivo measurement with a 7 T 3-channel C and 4-channel H transceiver array optimized for H-decoupled C-MRS in the posterior human calf muscles. To ensure minimal cross-coupling between C and H arrays, several strategies were combined: mutual magnetic flux was minimized by coil geometry, two LCC traps were inserted into each C element, and band-pass and low-pass filters were integrated along the signal pathways. The developed coil array was successfully tested in phantom and in vivo MR experiments, showing a simplified spectral pattern and increase in signal-to-noise ratio of approximately a factor 2 between non-decoupled and H-decoupled spectra in a glucose phantom and the human calf muscle.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5906453 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-24423-x | DOI Listing |
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