Non-T1-weighted 31P chemical shift imaging of the human liver

Magn Reson Imaging. 1995;13(4):621-8. doi: 10.1016/0730-725x(95)00005-2.

Abstract

A 31P chemical shift imaging (CSI) protocol was developed for human liver studies. It is shown that at the commonly used repetition time (TR) of 1 s T1-weighting reduces the integrated intensities of liver phosphate metabolite signals by 18 +/- 15% (inorganic phosphate, Pi) to 46 +/- 10% (phosphodiester, PDE), that is for an RF pulse angle of 60 degrees (weighted average) in liver. The loss in signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) at TR = 20 s, sufficient to eliminate spectral distortions caused by saturation, compared with TR = 1 s (47-65%) can be overcome by using one-dimensional (1D)-phase encoding with a small number of phase-encode steps. The liver spectra obtained by 1D-CSI with 4-step phase-encoding (spatial resolution 10 cm) have the highest S/N and, after multiplication of the PDE signal by a factor of 1.4, closely reflect the liver metabolite levels. It is concluded that clinical 31P MR studies of liver function can be performed without T1-weighting and that the current practice to compromise the MRS quantification of lever metabolites with uncertainties caused by (differential changes in) T1-weighting is not warranted.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Liver / chemistry*
  • Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy* / methods