GB2304419A - Method and apparatus for providing separate fat and water MRI images in a single acquisition scan - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for providing separate fat and water MRI images in a single acquisition scan Download PDF

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GB2304419A
GB2304419A GB9615571A GB9615571A GB2304419A GB 2304419 A GB2304419 A GB 2304419A GB 9615571 A GB9615571 A GB 9615571A GB 9615571 A GB9615571 A GB 9615571A GB 2304419 A GB2304419 A GB 2304419A
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nuclei
echo
phase
gradient
field
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Weiguo Zhang
David M Kramer
David M Goldhaber
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Toshiba America MRI Inc
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01RMEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
    • G01R33/00Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables
    • G01R33/20Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables involving magnetic resonance
    • G01R33/44Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables involving magnetic resonance using nuclear magnetic resonance [NMR]
    • G01R33/48NMR imaging systems
    • G01R33/4828Resolving the MR signals of different chemical species, e.g. water-fat imaging
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01RMEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
    • G01R33/00Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables
    • G01R33/20Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables involving magnetic resonance
    • G01R33/44Arrangements or instruments for measuring magnetic variables involving magnetic resonance using nuclear magnetic resonance [NMR]
    • G01R33/48NMR imaging systems
    • G01R33/483NMR imaging systems with selection of signals or spectra from particular regions of the volume, e.g. in vivo spectroscopy
    • G01R33/4833NMR imaging systems with selection of signals or spectra from particular regions of the volume, e.g. in vivo spectroscopy using spatially selective excitation of the volume of interest, e.g. selecting non-orthogonal or inclined slices
    • G01R33/4835NMR imaging systems with selection of signals or spectra from particular regions of the volume, e.g. in vivo spectroscopy using spatially selective excitation of the volume of interest, e.g. selecting non-orthogonal or inclined slices of multiple slices

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  • High Energy & Nuclear Physics (AREA)
  • Condensed Matter Physics & Semiconductors (AREA)
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Abstract

A method of obtaining three MRI images in a single scan for use in constructing separate water and fat images by appropriate equations is disclosed. The three images are obtained by sandwiching a spin echo (S o ) by two field echoes (S -* small Greek pi *, S * small Greek pi *). The method can also be used for multiple-echo and multiple-slice scans.

Description

METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR PROVIDING SEPARATE FAT AND WATER MRI IMAGES IN A SINGLE ACOUISITION SCAN FIELD OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to a method for obtaining MRI images that can be used to separate MRI images of water and fat, particularly when field inhomogeneities are present.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION MRI systems use the resonance effects that RF transmissions have on certain atomic nuclei such as those in hydrogen. Certain of these nuclei are first magnetically aligned by a strong static magnetic field B0 created by magnetic poles on opposite sides of the MRI imaging volume. The static field B0 is altered by gradient magnetic fields created in the X, Y, and Z directions of the imaging volume.Selected nuclei, which spin in alignment with the B0 field, are then resonated by an RF transmission, causing them to tip from the direction of the magnetic field B,. Thus, for example, in Figure 1, certain nuclei (designated by magnetic moment Mo) are aligned on the "Z'" axis by the static B0 field and then rotate to the X'-Y' plane as a result of an RF transmission signal imposed on them. The nuclei then precess in the X'-Y' plane as shown in Figure 1 which is a reference frame rotating at the nominal resonance frequency around the Z' axis.
The RF signal will, of course, tip more than one species of the target isotope in a particular area. Immediately after the RF transmission signal tips them, the spinning nuclei will all be in-phase; that is, the rotating magnetic moments all cross the "Y'" axis all at the same time.
After the RF transmission signal ends, the nuclei begin to freely precess around the Z' axis. As they do, the phase of the rotating nuclei will differ as a result of such parameters as the physical or chemical environment that the nuclei are located in. Nuclei in fat, for example, precess at a different rate than do nuclei in water. In an imaging pulse sequence there are magnetic field gradients which dephase the moments due to their local resonance frequency varying in space.
Also, once the spins are disturbed from their equilibrium, processes known as relaxation cause the component of magnetic moment in the X'-Y' plane to decay and the Z'-component to recover to its equilibrium magnitude, Mo. These processes are usually characterized by exponentials whose time constants are called T2 and T1, respectively. When magnetic resonance signals are observed through flux oscillation in a plane coexistent with they X'-Y' plane, both of these processes decrease the signal strength.
As a result, if the components of the magnetic moments in the X'-Y' plane of Figure 1 begin aligned on the Y'-axis, over time they will begin to spread out and disperse to fill the full rotational area. The moment M2, for example, which initially crossed the Y'-axis at the same time as M, gradually moves during the relaxation period to the position shown in Figure 1 as it spins faster than M,. M1, by contrast, spins slower than both M and M2, and thus begins to lag them during the dephasing period. The strength of the signal in the Y-direction thus decays as the magnetic moments disperse (i.e., lose phase coherence) in the X'-Y' plane.
Information about the hydrogen nuclei can be obtained, in part, by measuring the decay times. In addition, before the nuclei become completely dephased another RF signal (usually a 1800 signal) can tip the magnetic moments to a 1800 (-Y') position. This inverts the spinning magnetic moments M, M, and M2 so the fastest moment M2 lags M, which in turn lags the slowest moment M,. Eventually, the faster moment M2 will catch and pass the slowest moment M, during which, a so-called "spinecho" can be detected from the changes in magnetic moment. The whole procedure must be completed before T, or T2 relaxation destroy the X'-Y' component of the magnetic moment.
Echoes can also be formed by application of a field gradient and it's subsequent reversal, provided that it is done before T, or T2 relaxation destroy Mx.y.. This is commonly called a field echo or race-track echo.
The above are just two background examples of how the nuclei can be tipped, relaxed, brought in- or out-of-phase, etc. from which information about the nuclei can be obtained.
The differences in the phase relationships between the nuclei in one tissue versus another can be used as information to separate MRI images of fate$ components of tissue from fluids or water-based tissue (for these purposes, "water-based tissue" and "fluids" are used interchangeably).
Although MR images of both water and fat may contain the same or different diagnostic information, they often interfere with each other's interpretation when overlapped in an MRI image. At high fields strengths, the separation of water and fat images or suppression of fat signals can be achieved using selective excitation or non-excitation approaches. However, at mid- or low fields, approaches based on chemical shift selectivity become impractical, if not impossible. At all field strengths, the difficulties of water/fat separation are further exacerbated when there are large magnetic field inhomogeneities.
This difficulty in separating fat and water images in a practical MR imaging application is particularly true for mid- and low-field systems where the frequency separation between the water and fat signals is much reduced in comparison to that at high fields. Recently, several techniques were introduced for separation of water and fat images in the presence of large field inhomogeneities. Some of these techniques use multiple spinechoes, thus requiring the use of multiple RF refocusing pulses. They are therefore sensitive to B, inhomogeneities and also preclude multiple-echo experiments. On the other hand, the three-point Dixon method uses a single spin-echo sequence, but requires a minimum of three scans.
The Three-Point Dixon method has promising features for mid- or low field applications. It relies on the acquisition of three images for water/fat separation, an in-phase image and two out-phase images.
Unfortunately, it requires three scans to do so.
Figure 2 shows the three data acquisition schemes for the three images. Slice selection is not shown for simplicity. As those in the art will understand from Figure 2, three different scans are used. In the first, a 90" pulse is followed by a 1800 pulse at a time T, yielding the spin echo So Then, a 90" pulse is followed by a 1800 pulse a time T earlier than the time T, yielding a spin echo S=. Finally, another 90" pulse is followed by a 1800 pulse a time T later than the time T, yielding a spin echo S=. The Dixon Methodology is described in "Three-Point Dixon Technique for True Water Fat Decompositions with Bo Inhomogeneitv Corrected," 18 Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 371-383 (1991), by Glover et al., "True Water and Fat MR Imaging With Use of Multiple-Echo Acquisition", 173 Radiology 249-253 (1989), by Williams et al., "Separation of True Fat and Water Images Bv Correcting Magnetic Field Inhomogeneitv In Situ." 159 Radiology 783-786 (1986), by Yeung et al., which are incorporated herein by reference, and are summarized in part below.
The value of T is determined according to # = 1/(4##) with Av being the frequency difference between the water and fat signals. The value of t is thus chosen so the phase between the nuclei in, respectively, fat and water are 1) in-phase, 2) outof-phase by #, and 3) out-of-phase by -7t. Figure 3 schematically shows in a rotating frame the MR signals in the three different acquisition schemes.
In the presence of field inhomogeneities, the MR signals can be described by so = (Pw + PA = = (Pw = = (Pw - P) where # is the phase angle due to field inhomogeneities or frequency offset, and Pw and Pj are water and fat spin densities, respectively.
Thus # can be determined from S# and S , by # = ȧrg (S# .
where arg produces the phase angle of a complex number.
Water and fat images can then be reconstructed according to Iwater = So + 0.5S#e-i# + 0.5S-#ei# Ifat = So - 0.5S#e-i# - 0.5S-#ei# The central component of this method--and also the most demanding component to determine--is the phase angle #. The phase angle is generally determined by phase mapping. Calculating # from S# and S., involves: 1) fitting the phase derivatives to polynomial functions; and 2) phase unwrapping.
Each of these are discussed in turn below.
polynomial fitting The magnetic field is modeled using a polynomial function:
To find the coefficients an and bn, partial spatial derivatives of the phase value # are calculated and fit to the polynomial functions: ##(x,y) =p3x+p2x+p1 #x ##(x,y) =q3y+q2y+q1 #y Fitting was performed with weighted least-square with the weighting factors determined according to
where SO(x,y) is the pixel value in the in-phase image and Somax is the maximum of that image.
From p, and q", an and bn are calculated from the equations:
p1=a1-2a2x0+3a3xo p2=2a2-6a3xo p3=3a3 q1 =b1 -2b2yo+3b3yo q2 =2b2-6b3yo g3 =3b3 ii. Binary Phase Unwrapping If it can be assumed that the magnetic field fitting is relatively accurate within a small error range, for example, +0.27r, then unwrapping can be performed by simply comparing the measured phase # with the predicted phase fp: ## = #p - # If I X 1 > #, then #f used for water and fat image reconstruction is determined by #f=#+integer(##) x 2#.
where integer truncates the resulting quotient to whole number.
w. Unwrapping by Region Growing However, the field fitting may contain large errors (for example, > #) which will cause errors in phase unwrapping and consequently result in water/fat mutual contamination in the final images. To unwrap in a more fool-proof way, a region growing algorithm was implemented as the following: (A) A pixel in the image was chosen as the subseed for unwrapping and the measured phase value was assigned to the final phase value used for water and fat image reconstruction.
#f(xo,yo) = #(xo, yo) (B) From the subseed, a 4x4 seed was built by comparing the phase values to the subseed value. If the difference is larger than a predetermined threshold, a 2s unwrapping is executed: ## = # - #(xo, yo) = # + sign(##) x 2# (C) Continuing from the seed, a four column cross is built using a single direction prediction: #p = 1/4 { #f-4 + #f-3 + #f-2 #f-1 + 4##-1 + 3##-2 +2##-3 +##-4} ## = # - #p where full (i = 1, ...4) are unwrapped phase values of the neighboring pixel, ##-1 (i = 1,...4) are phase increments between two neighboring pixels from the polynomial fitting.
If the pixel value is smaller than the intensity threshold, #f is set to #p. Otherwise, if | # # | < # set #f to #. If | # # | > # then 4)f = integer(5/2it) x 2x.
(D) Using the cross, the four quadrants of the image are unwrapped using the same prediction approach, but in two directions.
Unwrapping is executed when both directions show the same execution for unwrapping. In other situations, the average of the predicted values is used. When the pixel value is below the intensity threshold, the phase value is again set to the predicted average value.
iv. Results Shown in Figure 4 are head images reconstructed with binary phase unwrapping. The left image of Figure 4 is a water and fat image; the middle image is water only; and the right image is fat only. The corresponding images reconstructed using the region growing algorithms are shown in Figure 5. Figures 6 and 7 show the abdominal images reconstructed in the same way as for Figure 3 and Figure 4, respectively.
As can be seen, this prior method obtains separate fat and water images but disadvantageously requires three scans to obtain them.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention is a technique which acquires all the information necessary for separating water and fat images using only a single scan. During the scan, a single "sandwich" spin-echo sequence is used in which a spin echo signal is sandwiched between two field echo signals to obtain the information necessary to solve the I,s, and Ifa, equations.
The method is also capable of multiple-slice multiple-echo acquisition.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS The purpose and advantages gained by the present invention will be understood by careful study of the following detailed description of the presently preferred embodiment with particular reference to the accompanying drawings.
FIGURE 1 is a schematic diagram of a rotating frame of MRI signals; FIGURE 2 is a graphical representation in the time domain of a prior art sequencing technique; FIGURE 3 is a schematic diagram of rotating frames of the MRI signals of Figure 2; FIGURE 4 are MRI three-point Dixon head images processed using the binary phase unwraparound algorithm; FIGURE 5 are MRI three-point Dixon head images processed using the region growing algorithm; FIGURE 6 are MRI three-point Dixon abdominal images processed using the binary phase unwraparound algorithm; FIGURE 7 are MRI three-point Dixon abdominal images processed using the region growing algorithm; and FIGURE 8 is a graphical representation in the time domain of a sequencing method according to one embodiment of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENTLY PREFERRED EMBODIMENT "Sandwich t Spin-Echo Sequence for Water/Fat imaging The basic principle of the Dixon technique for separating water/fat images is the acquisition of separate images with in-phase or out-phase water/fat signals, respectively. To obtain these images, the present invention recognizes that at lower field, the time period needed for the spin system to evolve from in-phase to out-phase is much longer (e.g., 10.2 rns at 0.35 T vs. 2.4 ms at 1.5 T for a 3.3 ppm chemical shift difference). As a result, it is possible to acquire a complete k-space data line within this evolution period. Figure 8 depicts one of such implementation by sandwiching a spin-echo between two field-echoes.
To obtain the three images in a single scan, a slice along the axis perpendicular to the desired viewing plane is selected for imaging by activating the slice axis gradient coil (G"k,). Thereafter, a 90" RF transmission signal nutates the selected nuclei 90" (for example) to a position on the Y'-axis. The nuclei in the excited plane are then dephased according to position along the encode-axis by the phase-encode gradient coils (GpbMc).
Later, at a time T following the 90 pulse, a 1800 RF transmission nutates the nuclei 1800. This induces a spin echo So at a time T following the 1800 RF transmission. This spin echo is detected by an RF receiver coil and RF receiver. It can be used as So in the Dixon equations.
Between the 90 and 1800 RF transmissions, the readout or frequency-encode axis gradient coil imposes a preliminary phase gradient on the nuclei. Then, before the spin echo So occurs, the readout axis gradient coil (Gread) is activated to produce a field echo S-# # at a time T' before the spin echo occurs. This field echo S-# # is detected by an RF receiver coil and RF receiver. It can be used as S-# in the Dixon equations.
In essence, since the spin echo So will naturally occur at a time duration following the 1800 pulse equal to the time duration between the 90 and 1800 pulse, the field echo S-# can be timed to occur a time amount T before that expected So echo.
Before the spin echo So occurs, the readout axis gradient coil current is inverted. Then, after the spin echo So, the readout axis gradient coil current is again inverted to produce a second field echo S# at a time t' after the spin echo So This field echo S, is also detected and used in the Dixon equations.
The time < ' is determined in accordance with ' = 1/2(Au) as described below. The field echoes are timed to the value of #' by bump adjustments 80 as shown at the leading edges of the Gread signal. The height (or depth) and width of the bump adjustment in the Gread signal will move the resultant S-# and S, echoes relative to the S0 echo so the field echoes can be timed to +n' and -n', respectively, from the spin echo SO occurrence. The bump adjustments are set based on normal calibration parameters, and will be affected by such things as the gradient power amplifier slew rate, etc.
With values for S.,, So, and S, in the Dixon equations, Icr and Ifat can be determined according to the methods described above in the Background of the Invention.
In particular, the value of 5' was determined according to #'= 2## with ## being the frequency separation of the water and fat signals.
The MRI sequence depicted in Figure 8 was implemented on a Toshiba 0.35 T system, and both phantom and human head images were acquired. Data processing procedures involved for separating water/fat images were as described in the Background section and in Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 18; 371-383 (1991).
In some embodiments, there may still be time in the sequence for acquiring more k-space data, e.g., by acquiring several field-echoes before the 1800 refocusing pulse. This will be a useful feature of the sequence for separating multiple components such as water-fat-silicone.
The proposed sequence is fully capable of multiple-slice multipleecho acquisition. However, the gradients need to be carefully balanced so that echo signals are correctly positioned corresponding to full refocusing of the field inhomogeneities in So. This technique is compatible with many multi echo, multi scanning methods, such as that described in "RARE Imaging: A Fast Imagine Method For Clinical MR. Henning, et al., Magn. Reson. Med. 1986; 3: 823-833.
In addition, image distortion due to field inhomogeneities is different between the middle echo and the outside echoes due to the inversion of the read gradient. When this becomes a problem for separation of water and fat images, the field inhomogeneity map produced for water/fat separation can also be used to correct the distortion. This is described in Sumanaweera, et al., IEEE Transc. Med. Imag. 12, 251 (1993), which is incorporated herein by reference. Another solution is to only readout the echoes with the readout gradient in one polarity and force the tuning bumps (80) to be large and oppoing polarity.
The invention is not limited to low-field or mid-field systems nor to the exact sequencing shown in Figure 8, but may be used in any system in which the T2 relaxation time permits the sandwiching of the spin echo by two field echoes.
While the invention has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiment, but on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.

Claims (6)

CLAIMS:
1. A method of obtaining signals for use in separating images of fat-based nuclei and water-based nuclei in an MRI signal, in which the fatbased nuclei precess out-of-phase with the water-based nuclei by an amount n: after a time T', comprising the steps of: 1) magnetically aligning the nuclei in a first direction by a static magnetic field; 2) imposing a slice gradient on the nuclei to select a planar slice for imaging; 3) nutating the nuclei by a first RF transmission signal; 4) removing the first RF transmission signal and slice gradient; 5) imposing a phase distribution with a phase-encode and a readout gradient field pulse on the selected nuclei; 6) nutating the nuclei by a second RF transmission signal to induce a spin echo;; 7) before the spin echo, imposing a read gradient on the selected nuclei to induce a first field echo at a time 1' before the spin echo and receiving the echo; 8) after the field echo, imposing an inverted read gradient on the selected nuclei to read out the spin echo; 9) after the spin echo, again reversing the read gradient on the selected nuclei to induce a second field echo at a time 1' after the spin echo and receiving the echo; and 10) repeating steps 2-9 with various phase encoding gradient pulses to acquire the complete spatial data for an encode direction.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the first RF transmission is a 90" pulse and the second RF transmission is a 1800 pulse.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the slice gradient, readout gradient and the phase-encode gradient directions are mutually perpendicular.
4. The method according to claim 1, further comprising the step (after step 10) of, before imposing another nutating first RF transmission signal, again nutating the nuclei by additional second RF transmission signals to induce additional spin echos and then repeating steps 7-9 for each additional second RF transmission.
5. The method according to claim 4, further comprising the use of additional phase-encode axis pulses to each set of spin echo plus 2 field echoes to reduce total scan time.
6. A method of obtaining signals for use in separating images of fat-based nuclei and water-based nuclei in an MRI signal substantially as hereinbefore described.
GB9615571A 1995-08-18 1996-07-24 Method and apparatus for providing separate fat and water MRI images in a single acquisition scan Withdrawn GB2304419A (en)

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2320576A (en) * 1996-12-18 1998-06-24 Toshiba America Mri Inc A multi-echo Dixon water and fat separation sequence
EP1063532A2 (en) * 1999-06-24 2000-12-27 GE Yokogawa Medical Systems Ltd. Magnetic field inhomogeneity measurement method and apparatus, Phase correction method and apparatus
EP1094332A2 (en) * 1999-10-22 2001-04-25 GE Medical Systems Global Technology Company LLC Phase distribution measurement method and apparatus, phase correction method and apparatus, and magnetic resonance imaging apparatus

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6263228B1 (en) * 1998-08-27 2001-07-17 Toshiba America, Mri, Inc. Method and apparatus for providing separate water-dominant and fat-dominant images from single scan single point dixon MRI sequences
US7099499B2 (en) * 2002-08-15 2006-08-29 General Electric Company Fat/water separation and fat minimization magnetic resonance imaging systems and methods
CN103371818B (en) 2012-04-27 2015-05-13 西门子(深圳)磁共振有限公司 Water-fat image discriminating method and device and water-fat image uniformization method and device

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JPH0263434A (en) * 1988-08-31 1990-03-02 Toshiba Corp Magnetic resonance imaging method
JPH0479938A (en) * 1990-07-20 1992-03-13 Toshiba Corp Magnetic resonance signal collection method

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JPH0479938A (en) * 1990-07-20 1992-03-13 Toshiba Corp Magnetic resonance signal collection method

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5909119A (en) * 1995-08-18 1999-06-01 Toshiba America Mri, Inc. Method and apparatus for providing separate fat and water MRI images in a single acquisition scan
GB2320576A (en) * 1996-12-18 1998-06-24 Toshiba America Mri Inc A multi-echo Dixon water and fat separation sequence
EP1063532A2 (en) * 1999-06-24 2000-12-27 GE Yokogawa Medical Systems Ltd. Magnetic field inhomogeneity measurement method and apparatus, Phase correction method and apparatus
EP1063532A3 (en) * 1999-06-24 2009-03-18 GE Yokogawa Medical Systems Ltd. Magnetic field inhomogeneity measurement method and apparatus, Phase correction method and apparatus
EP1094332A2 (en) * 1999-10-22 2001-04-25 GE Medical Systems Global Technology Company LLC Phase distribution measurement method and apparatus, phase correction method and apparatus, and magnetic resonance imaging apparatus
EP1094332A3 (en) * 1999-10-22 2003-01-29 GE Medical Systems Global Technology Company LLC Phase distribution measurement method and apparatus, phase correction method and apparatus, and magnetic resonance imaging apparatus
US6630827B1 (en) 1999-10-22 2003-10-07 Ge Medical Systems Global Technology Company, Llc Phase distribution measurement method and apparatus, phase correction method and apparatus, and magnetic resonance imaging apparatus

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