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An accelerated PETALUTE MRI sequence for in vivo quantification of sodium content in human articular cartilage at 3T.

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: In this work, we evaluate the sodium magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) capabilities of a three-dimensional (3D) dual-echo ultrashort echo time (UTE) sequence with a novel rosette petal trajectory (PETALUTE), in comparison to the 3D density-adapted (DA) radial spokes UTE sequence in human articular cartilage in the knee. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We scanned five healthy subjects using a 3D dual-echo PETALUTE acquisition and two comparable implementations of 3D DA-radial spokes acquisitions, one matching the number of k-space projections (Radial - Matched Spokes) and the other matching the total number of samples (Radial - Matched Samples) acquired in k-space. RESULTS: The PETALUTE acquisition enabled equivalent sodium quantification in articular cartilage volumes of interest (168.8 ± 29.9 mM, mean ± standard deviation) to those derived from the 3D radial acquisitions (171.62 ± 28.7 mM and 149.8 ± 22.2 mM, respectively). We achieved a 41% shorter scan time of 2:06 for 3D PETALUTE, compared to 3:36 for 3D radial acquisitions. We also evaluated the feasibility of further acceleration of the PETALUTE sequence through retrospective compressed sensing with 2 × and 4 × acceleration of the first echo and showed structural similarity of 0.89 ± 0.03 and 0.87 ± 0.03 when compared to non-retrospectively accelerated reconstruction. CONCLUSION: We demonstrate improved scan time with equivalent performance using a 3D dual-echo PETALUTE sequence compared to the 3D DA-radial sequence for sodium MRI of articular cartilage.

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Acknowledgements: We thank Armin M. Nagel for providing the radial sequence for comparison.

Journal Title

Skeletal Radiol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0364-2348
1432-2161

Volume Title

54

Publisher

Springer Nature

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Sponsorship
Office of Extramural Research, National Institutes of Health (S10 OD012336)
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (T32 DK101001)
Division of Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation (2149946)