Nathan S. Artz1, Kevin Johnson1,
Yin Huang1, Elizabeth A. Sadowski2, Sean B. Fain1,2
1Medical Physics, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States; 2Radiology,
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States
Quantifying
arterial spin labeling (ASL) perfusion measurements using data acquired at
only one delay time requires assumptions for quantification that may be
invalid, especially in diseased kidneys which may demonstrate a wide variety
of blood flows. The purpose of this
study was to demonstrate the feasibility of efficiently acquiring data at
multiple delay times using a radial balanced SSFP approach. ASL-FAIR was performed in a healthy
volunteer at 1.5 T during which unique radial projections were continually
acquired from 0.2 to 2 seconds following inversion. Twenty delay time images were acquired over
11 minutes. The control and tag images
show reasonable image clarity and the difference images clearly demonstrate
perfusion however streaking is originating from below the left kidney (right
side). Future work will focus on
reducing the streak artifact using motion compensation techniques and/or
optimizing k-space trajectories.