Deuterium Metabolic Imaging (DMI) is a novel approach providing 3D metabolic data from both animal models and human subjects. DMI relies on 2H MRSI in combination with administration of 2H-labeled substrates. Common to all MRI and MRSI methods, DMI's resolution is ultimately limited by the achievable SNR. This work proposes a data-driven method using a deep convolutional autoencoder to improve the SNR and increase the spatial resolution of DMI. The method was tested with simulated, phantom and in vivo experiments at various SNR levels to demonstrate its capability and precision for metabolic mapping using noisy DMI data.
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