Efficient Interleaved Multi-Band Outer Volume Suppression for Highly Accelerated Simultaneous Multi-Slice Imaging of the Heart
A. Arami (Leiden University Medical Center, TU Delft - ImPhys/Weingärtner group)
Omer Burak Demirel (Philips North America)
Toygan Kilic (University of Minnesota)
Steen Moeller (University of Minnesota)
Y. Zhao (TU Delft - ImPhys/Tao group)
Y. Zhang (TU Delft - ImPhys/Tao group)
Q. Tao (TU Delft - ImPhys/Tao group)
Hildo J. Lamb (Leiden University Medical Center)
Mehmet Akcakaya (University of Minnesota)
S.D. Weingärtner (TU Delft - ImPhys/Weingärtner group, TU Delft - ImPhys/Computational Imaging)
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Abstract
In this work, we aimed to develop and evaluate multi-band outer volume suppression pulses for increased acceleration rates in simultaneous multi-slice accelerated cardiac MRI. MB-OVS pulses were constructed from a multi-band combination of two slab-selective saturation pulses and tested for various pulse shapes using Bloch simulation and phantom experiment. The MB-OVS pulses were interleaved between imaging pulses to ensure homogeneous suppression throughout the cardiac cycle/imaging window in vivo. Simultaneous multi-slice (SMS) CINE and first-pass myocardial perfusion scans with and without the proposed MB-OVS pulses were compared in terms of residual artifacts at high acceleration rates. Among the tested pulses, both Bloch simulation and phantom experiments showed that amplitude-optimized sinc pulses provided the best trade-off in suppression efficiency, the required B+ 1 , SAR, and slab profile. CINE imaging with 5-fold SMS-OVS acceleration significantly outperformed imaging without MB-OVS, maintaining leakage-free image quality, even when adding 2-fold in-plane acceleration. SMS-OVS also enabled perfusion imaging in 9 slices with 1.7 × 1.7 mm2 resolution, achieving a 16-fold spatial-only acceleration while ensuring accurate contrast dynamics without leakage artifacts. Interleaved MB-OVS modules enabled thorough leakage artifact suppression in cardiac SMS-accelerated CINE and perfusion imaging, particularly at high acceleration rates. The proposed approach may be promising for unlocking further acceleration potential of SMS in cardiac imaging.