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PURPOSE: To develop a new method for high-fidelity, high-resolution 3D multi-slab diffusion MRI with minimal distortion and boundary slice aliasing. METHODS: Our method modifies 3D multi-slab imaging to integrate blip-reversed acquisitions for distortion correction and oversampling in the slice direction (kz ) for reducing boundary slice aliasing. Our aim is to achieve robust acceleration to keep the scan time the same as conventional 3D multi-slab acquisitions, in which data are acquired with a single direction of blip traversal and without kz -oversampling. We employ a two-stage reconstruction. In the first stage, the blip-up/down images are respectively reconstructed and analyzed to produce a field map for each diffusion direction. In the second stage, the blip-reversed data and the field map are incorporated into a joint reconstruction to produce images that are corrected for distortion and boundary slice aliasing. RESULTS: We conducted experiments at 7T in six healthy subjects. Stage 1 reconstruction produces images from highly under-sampled data (R = 7.2) with sufficient quality to provide accurate field map estimation. Stage 2 joint reconstruction substantially reduces distortion artifacts with comparable quality to fully-sampled blip-reversed results (2.4× scan time). Whole-brain in-vivo results acquired at 1.22 mm and 1.05 mm isotropic resolutions demonstrate improved anatomical fidelity compared to conventional 3D multi-slab imaging. Data demonstrate good reliability and reproducibility of the proposed method over multiple subjects. CONCLUSION: The proposed acquisition and reconstruction framework provide major reductions in distortion and boundary slice aliasing for 3D multi-slab diffusion MRI without increasing the scan time, which can potentially produce high-quality, high-resolution diffusion MRI.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1002/mrm.29741

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2023-10-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

90

Pages

1484 - 1501

Total pages

17

Keywords

3D multi-slab imaging, CAIPI, SPIRiT reconstruction, blip-reversed acquisition, tractography, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Brain, Artifacts, Acceleration, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Echo-Planar Imaging, Algorithms