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Methodological consensus on clinical proton MRS of the brain: Review and recommendations

Authors :
Wilson, Martin
Andronesi, Ovidiu
Barker, Peter B
Bartha, Robert
Bizzi, Alberto
Bolan, Patrick J
Brindle, Kevin M
Choi, In-Young
Cudalbu, Cristina
Dydak, Ulrike
Emir, Uzay E
Gonzalez, Ramon G
Gruber, Stephan
Gruetter, Rolf
Gupta, Rakesh K
Heerschap, Arend
Henning, Anke
Hetherington, Hoby P
Huppi, Petra S
Hurd, Ralph E
Kantarci, Kejal
Kauppinen, Risto A
Klomp, Dennis WJ
Kreis, Roland
Kruiskamp, Marijn J
Leach, Martin O
Lin, Alexander P
Luijten, Peter R
Marjańska, Małgorzata
Maudsley, Andrew A
Meyerhoff, Dieter J
Mountford, Carolyn E
Mullins, Paul G
Murdoch, James B
Nelson, Sarah J
Noeske, Ralph
Öz, Gülin
Pan, Julie W
Peet, Andrew C
Poptani, Harish
Posse, Stefan
Ratai, Eva-Maria
Salibi, Nouha
Scheenen, Tom WJ
Smith, Ian CP
Soher, Brian J
Tkáč, Ivan
Vigneron, Daniel B
Howe, Franklyn A
Source :
Magnetic resonance in medicine, vol 82, iss 2
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2019.

Abstract

Proton MRS (1 H MRS) provides noninvasive, quantitative metabolite profiles of tissue and has been shown to aid the clinical management of several brain diseases. Although most modern clinical MR scanners support MRS capabilities, routine use is largely restricted to specialized centers with good access to MR research support. Widespread adoption has been slow for several reasons, and technical challenges toward obtaining reliable good-quality results have been identified as a contributing factor. Considerable progress has been made by the research community to address many of these challenges, and in this paper a consensus is presented on deficiencies in widely available MRS methodology and validated improvements that are currently in routine use at several clinical research institutions. In particular, the localization error for the PRESS localization sequence was found to be unacceptably high at 3 T, and use of the semi-adiabatic localization by adiabatic selective refocusing sequence is a recommended solution. Incorporation of simulated metabolite basis sets into analysis routines is recommended for reliably capturing the full spectral detail available from short TE acquisitions. In addition, the importance of achieving a highly homogenous static magnetic field (B0 ) in the acquisition region is emphasized, and the limitations of current methods and hardware are discussed. Most recommendations require only software improvements, greatly enhancing the capabilities of clinical MRS on existing hardware. Implementation of these recommendations should strengthen current clinical applications and advance progress toward developing and validating new MRS biomarkers for clinical use.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Magnetic resonance in medicine, vol 82, iss 2
Accession number :
edsair.od.......325..683b1dcffdd9b417586ee1807dbf19b2