Multi-slice inversion–recovery EPI (MS-IR-EPI) combined with slice order shifting across multiple acquisitions can provide a fast method for high spatial resolution T1 mapping. However, magnetization transfer (MT) effects of spectrally-selective fat-suppression pulses used in in-vivo imaging shorten measured T1-values. Here we model the effect of fat-suppression pulses on measured T1 and use this model to remove the MT contribution, improving the accuracy of T1 quantification. MT-corrected high spatial resolution T1 maps of the human brain generated with MS-IR-EPI at 7T are compared with those generated with the widely implemented MP2RAGE sequence and standard single slice IR-EPI.
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