Breger R K, Wehrli F W, Charles H C, MacFall J R, Haughton V M
Magn Reson Med. 1986 Oct;3(5):649-62. doi: 10.1002/mrm.1910030502.
The reproducibility of T1, T2, and proton density, measured in phantoms and the human brain was evaluated by proton imaging techniques. The sequence used to derive T1 and density values was a multiple-saturation recovery which consists of four pairs of 90 degrees pulses, followed by a 180 degrees phase reversal pulse, generating four T1-weighted images. T2 was derived from a multiple-echo sequence, generating four T2-weighted images. The data were analyzed by fitting the pixel intensities to the respective equations by means of nonlinear multiparameter least-squares analysis. Short-term reproducibility between four consecutive scans was evaluated to be 1-4% depending on location with a phantom covering the entire span of physiologic T1 and T2 values. A second phantom containing a series of identical samples served to study the dependence of the apparent T1 and T2 on position, both radially and axially, with respect to magnet isocenter. Reproducibility across the field of view was found to be better than 7% (T1 and T2). This phantom was further used to evaluate effects of long-term reproducibility, which at each location varied from 5-14% (T1) and 2-10% (T2). Finally, interinstrument reproducibility, tested by means of the same protocol on three different instruments, all operating at the same magnetic field and using largely identical hardware for each location, was found to be 1-14% (T1) and 2-10% (T2). The positional dependence of the apparent relaxation times appears to be systematic and may be due to variations in the effective field, caused by magnet and rf inhomogeneity. Finally, brain tissue relaxation and spin-density data were determined using the same protocol in 37 scans performed on 27 normal volunteers. The tissues analyzed were putamen, thalamus, caudate nucleus, centrum semiovale, internal capsule, and corpus callosum. Excellent accordance was further obtained between left and right hemispheres.
通过质子成像技术评估了在体模和人脑中测量的T1、T2及质子密度的可重复性。用于得出T1和密度值的序列是多重饱和恢复序列,它由四对90度脉冲组成,随后是一个180度相位反转脉冲,生成四张T1加权图像。T2由多重回波序列得出,生成四张T2加权图像。通过非线性多参数最小二乘法分析将像素强度拟合到各自的方程来分析数据。根据位置不同,对覆盖生理性T1和T2值整个范围的体模进行的四次连续扫描之间的短期可重复性评估为1%-4%。第二个包含一系列相同样本的体模用于研究表观T1和T2相对于磁等中心在径向和轴向上位置的依赖性。发现视野范围内的可重复性优于7%(T1和T2)。该体模进一步用于评估长期可重复性的影响,在每个位置其变化范围为5%-14%(T1)和2%-10%(T2)。最后,通过在三台不同仪器上使用相同方案进行测试,发现仪器间可重复性为1%-14%(T1)和2%-10%(T2),这三台仪器均在相同磁场下运行,且每个位置使用的硬件基本相同。表观弛豫时间的位置依赖性似乎是系统性的,可能是由磁体和射频不均匀性导致的有效场变化引起的。最后,使用相同方案对27名正常志愿者进行了37次扫描,测定了脑组织弛豫和自旋密度数据。分析的组织包括壳核、丘脑、尾状核、半卵圆中心、内囊和胼胝体。左右半球之间进一步获得了极佳的一致性。