Simultaneous multi-slice T1 mapping using MOLLI with blipped CAIPIRINHA bSSFP

Magn Reson Imaging. 2023 Jan:95:90-102. doi: 10.1016/j.mri.2020.03.006. Epub 2020 Apr 15.

Abstract

Background: This study evaluates the possibility for replacing conventional 3 slices, 3 breath-holds MOLLI cardiac T1 mapping with single breath-hold 3 simultaneous multi-slice (SMS3) T1 mapping using blipped-CAIPIRINHA SMS-bSSFP MOLLI sequence. As a major drawback, SMS-bSSFP presents unique artefacts arising from side-lobe slice excitations that are explained by imperfect RF modulation rendering and bSSFP low flip angle enhancement. Amplitude-only RF modulation (AM) is proposed to reduce these artefacts in SMS-MOLLI compared to conventional Wong multi-band RF modulation (WM).

Materials and methods: Phantoms and ten healthy volunteers were imaged at 1.5 T using a modified blipped-CAIPIRINHA SMS-bSSFP MOLLI sequence with 3 simultaneous slices. WM-SMS3 and AM-SMS3 were compared to conventional single-slice (SMS1) MOLLI. First, SNR degradation and T1 accuracy were measured in phantoms. Second, artefacts from side-lobe excitations were evaluated in a phantom designed to reproduce fat presence near the heart. Third, the occurrence of these artefacts was observed in volunteers, and their impact on T1 quantification was compared between WM-SMS3 and AM-SMS3 with conventional MOLLI as a reference.

Results: In the phantom, larger slice gaps and slice thicknesses yielded higher SNR. There was no significant difference of T1 values between conventional MOLLI and SMS3-MOLLI (both WM and AM). Positive banding artefacts were identified from fat neighbouring the targeted FOV due to side-lobe excitations from WM and the unique bSSFP signal profile. AM RF pulses reduced these artefacts by 38%. In healthy volunteers, AM-SMS3-MOLLI showed similar artefact reduction compared to WM-SMS3-MOLLI (3 ± 2 vs 5 ± 3 corrupted LV segments out of 16). In-vivo native T1 values obtained from conventional MOLLI and AM-SMS3-MOLLI were equivalent in LV myocardium (SMS1-T1 = 935.5 ± 36.1 ms; AM-SMS3-T1 = 933.8 ± 50.2 ms; P = 0.436) and LV blood pool (SMS1-T1 = 1475.4 ± 35.9 ms; AM-SMS3-T1 = 1452.5 ± 70.3 ms; P = 0.515). Identically, no differences were found between SMS1 and SMS3 postcontrast T1 values in the myocardium (SMS1-T1 = 556.0 ± 19.7 ms; SMS3-T1 = 521.3 ± 28.1 ms; P = 0.626) and the blood (SMS1-T1 = 478 ± 65.1 ms; AM-SMS3-T1 = 447.8 ± 81.5; P = 0.085).

Conclusions: Compared to WM RF modulation, AM SMS-bSSFP MOLLI was able to reduce side-lobe artefacts considerably, providing promising results to image the three levels of the heart in a single breath hold. However, few artefacts remained even using AM-SMS-bSSFP due to residual RF imperfections. The proposed blipped-CAIPIRINHA MOLLI T1 mapping sequence provides accurate in vivo T1 quantification in line with those obtained with a single slice acquisition.

Keywords: Amplitude-only modulation; Blipped-CAIPIRINHA; CAIPIRINHA; MOLLI; Simultaneous multi-slice; T1 mapping; Wong modulation; bSSFP.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Artifacts
  • Humans
  • Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted* / methods
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging* / methods
  • Phantoms, Imaging
  • Reproducibility of Results