Purpose: Diffusion encoding gradients are known to yield vibrations of the typical clinical MR scanner hardware with a frequency of 20 to 30 Hz, which may lead to signal loss in diffusion-weighted MR measurements. This work proposes to mitigate vibration-induced signal loss by introducing a vibration-matching gradient (VMG) to match vibrational states during the 2 diffusion gradient pulses.
Theory and methods: A theoretical description of displacements induced by gradient switching was introduced and modeled by a 2-mass-spring-damper system. An additional preceding VMG mimicking timing and properties of the diffusion encoding gradients was added to a high b-value diffusion-weighted MR spectroscopy sequence. Laser interferometry was employed to measure 3D displacements of a phantom surface. Lipid ADC was assessed in water-fat phantoms and in vivo in the tibial bone marrow of 3 volunteers.
Results: The modeling and the laser interferometer measurements revealed that the displacement curves are more similar during the 2 diffusion gradients with the VMG compared to the standard sequence, resulting in less signal loss of the diffusion-weighted signal. Phantom results showed lipid ADC overestimation up to 119% with the standard sequence and an error of 5.5% with the VMG. An 18% to 35% lower coefficient of variation was obtained for in vivo lipid ADC measurement when employing the VMG.
Conclusion: The application of the VMG reduces the signal loss introduced by hardware vibrations in a high b-value diffusion-weighted MRS sequence in phantoms and in vivo. Reference measurements based on laser interferometry and mechanical modelling confirmed the findings.
Keywords: artifact reduction; diffusion weighting; high b-value; mechanical vibrations; scanner table vibrations.
© 2019 The Authors. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.