Accelerated MR spectroscopic imaging: A review of current and emerging techniques Review


Authors: Bogner, W.; Otazo, R.; Henning, A.
Review Title: Accelerated MR spectroscopic imaging: A review of current and emerging techniques
Abstract: Over more than 30 years in vivo MR spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) has undergone an enormous evolution from theoretical concepts in the early 1980s to the robust imaging technique that it is today. The development of both fast and efficient sampling and reconstruction techniques has played a fundamental role in this process. State-of-the-art MRSI has grown from a slow purely phase-encoded acquisition technique to a method that today combines the benefits of different acceleration techniques. These include shortening of repetition times, spatial-spectral encoding, undersampling of k-space and time domain, and use of spatial-spectral prior knowledge in the reconstruction. In this way in vivo MRSI has considerably advanced in terms of spatial coverage, spatial resolution, acquisition speed, artifact suppression, number of detectable metabolites and quantification precision. Acceleration not only has been the enabling factor in high-resolution whole-brain 1H-MRSI, but today is also common in non-proton MRSI (31P, 2H and 13C) and applied in many different organs. In this process, MRSI techniques had to constantly adapt, but have also benefitted from the significant increase of magnetic field strength boosting the signal-to-noise ratio along with high gradient fidelity and high-density receive arrays. In combination with recent trends in image reconstruction and much improved computation power, these advances led to a number of novel developments with respect to MRSI acceleration. Today MRSI allows for non-invasive and non-ionizing mapping of the spatial distribution of various metabolites’ tissue concentrations in animals or humans, is applied for clinical diagnostics and has been established as an important tool for neuro-scientific and metabolism research. This review highlights the developments of the last five years and puts them into the context of earlier MRSI acceleration techniques. In addition to 1H-MRSI it also includes other relevant nuclei and is not limited to certain body regions or specific applications. © 2020 The Authors. NMR in Biomedicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Keywords: human tissue; review; signal noise ratio; in vivo study; image enhancement; brain; clinical research; reconstruction; artifact reduction; image reconstruction; theoretical study; clinical diagnostics; acceleration technique; imaging techniques; metabolites; signal to noise ratio; acquisition; magnetic field; spatial resolution; acceleration; parallel imaging; mr spectroscopic imaging; compressed sensing; undersampling; human; efficient sampling; spatial-spectral encoding; artifact suppression; magnetic field strengths; tissue concentrations; time domain analysis
Journal Title: NMR in Biomedicine
Volume: 34
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0952-3480
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons  
Date Published: 2021-05-01
Start Page: e4314
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/nbm.4314
PUBMED: 32399974
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC8244067
DOI/URL:
Notes: Review -- Export Date: 3 May 2021 -- Source: Scopus
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