Maarten J.
Versluis1,2, Johannes M. Peeters3, Sanneke van Rooden1,2,
Jeroen van der Grond1, Mark A. van Buchem1, Andrew G.
Webb1,2, Matthias J. van Osch1,2
1Radiology, Leiden University Medical
Center, Leiden, Netherlands; 2CJ Gorter Center for High Field MRI,
Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands; 3Philips
Healthcare, Best, Netherlands
Image
quality is decreased substantially in 7T high resolution T2*-weighted images
in Alzheimers disease (AD) patients compared to younger volunteers. The
source of the image artifacts was investigated in phantom experiments using
translational/rotational motion parameters and f0 fluctuations from AD
patients. It was found that image degradation by f0 fluctuations was a
factor-of-four times larger than artifacts caused by movement typical of AD
patients. By implementing a navigator echo correction for f0 fluctuations,
the image quality increased considerably. This technique was succesfully
applied in four AD patients showing significant image quality improvements.