scholarly journals Temporal signal-to-noise changes in combined multiband- and slice-accelerated echo-planar imaging with a 20- and 64-channel coil

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philipp Seidel ◽  
Seth M. Levine ◽  
Marlene Tahedl ◽  
Jens V. Schwarzbach

Echo planar imaging (EPI) is the most common method of functional magnetic resonance imaging for acquiring the blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) contrast. One of the primary benefits of using EPI is that an entire volume of the brain can be acquired on the order of two seconds. However, this speed benefit comes with a cost. Because imaging protocols are limited by hardware (e.g., fast gradient switching), researchers are forced to compromise between spatial resolution, temporal resolution, or whole-brain coverage. Earlier attempts to circumvent this problem included developing protocols in which slices of a volume were acquired faster (i.e., slice (S) acceleration), while more recent protocols allow for multiple slices to be acquired simultaneously (i.e., multiband (MB) acceleration). However, applying such acceleration methods can lead to a reduction in the temporal signal-to-noise ratio (tSNR), which is a critical measure of the stability of the signal over time. Here we show, in five healthy subjects, using a 20- and 64-channel receiver coil, that enabling S-acceleration consistently yielded, as expected, a substantial decrease in tSNR, regardless of the receiver coil employed, whereas tSNR decrease resulting from MB acceleration was less pronounced. Specifically, with the 20-channel coil, tSNR of upto 4-fold MB-acceleration is comparable to that of no acceleration, while up to 6-fold MB-acceleration with the 64-channel coil yields comparable tSNR to that of no acceleration. Moreover, observed tSNR losses tended to be localized to temporal, insular, and medial brain regions and were more noticeable in the 20-than in the 64-channel coil. Conversely, with the 64-channel coil, the tSNR in lateral frontoparietal regions remained relatively stable with increasing MB factors. Such methodological explorations can inform researchers and clinicians as to how they can optimize imaging protocols depending on the available hardware and the brain regions they want to investigate.

1997 ◽  
Vol 39 (12) ◽  
pp. 833-840 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Ozdoba ◽  
L. Remonda ◽  
O. Heid ◽  
K.-O. L�vblad ◽  
G. Schroth

Author(s):  
Rüdiger Stirnberg ◽  
Tony Stöcker

AbstractPurposeA segmented k-space blipped-CAIPI (skipped-CAIPI) sampling strategy for echo planar imaging (EPI) is proposed, which allows for a flexible choice of EPI factor and phase encode bandwidth independent of the controlled aliasing (CAIPIRINHA) pattern.Theory and MethodsWith previously proposed approaches, exactly two EPI trajectories were possible given a specific CAIPIRINHA pattern: either with slice gradient blips (blipped-CAIPI), or following a shot-selective approach (higher resolution). Recently, interleaved multi-shot segmentation along shot-selective CAIPI trajectories has been applied for high-resolution anatomical imaging. For more flexibility and a broader range of applications, we propose segmentation along any blipped-CAIPI trajectory. Thus, all EPI factors and phase encode bandwidths available with traditional segmented EPI can be combined with controlled aliasing.ResultsTemporal signal-to-noise ratios of moderate-to-high-resolution time series acquisitions at varying undersampling factors demonstrate beneficial sampling alternatives to blipped-CAIPI or shot-selective CAIPI. Rapid high-resolution scans furthermore demonstrate SNR-efficient and motion-robust structural imaging with almost arbitrary EPI factor and minimal noise penalty.ConclusionsSkipped-CAIPI sampling increases protocol flexibility for high spatiotemporal resolution EPI. In terms of signal-to-noise ratio and efficiency, high-resolution functional or structural scans benefit vastly from a free choice of the CAIPIRINHA pattern. Even at moderate resolutions, the independence of sampling pattern, echo time and image matrix size is valuable for optimized functional protocol design. Although demonstrated with 3D-EPI, skipped-CAIPI is also applicable with simultaneous multislice EPI.


2015 ◽  
Vol 75 (6) ◽  
pp. 2362-2371 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Lalith Talagala ◽  
Joelle E. Sarlls ◽  
Siyuan Liu ◽  
Souheil J. Inati

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