Is your system calibrated? MRI gradient system calibration for pre-clinical, high-resolution imaging.

High-field, pre-clinical MRI systems are widely used to characterise tissue structure and volume in small animals, using high resolution imaging. Both applications rely heavily on the consistent, accurate calibration of imaging gradients, yet such calibrations are typically only performed during mai...

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Main Authors: James O'Callaghan, Jack Wells, Simon Richardson, Holly Holmes, Yichao Yu, Simon Walker-Samuel, Bernard Siow, Mark F Lythgoe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4013024?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-1b3e393fcfaa4ce0a9a300213e8b12f12020-11-25T01:25:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0195e9656810.1371/journal.pone.0096568Is your system calibrated? MRI gradient system calibration for pre-clinical, high-resolution imaging.James O'CallaghanJack WellsSimon RichardsonHolly HolmesYichao YuSimon Walker-SamuelBernard SiowMark F LythgoeHigh-field, pre-clinical MRI systems are widely used to characterise tissue structure and volume in small animals, using high resolution imaging. Both applications rely heavily on the consistent, accurate calibration of imaging gradients, yet such calibrations are typically only performed during maintenance sessions by equipment manufacturers, and potentially with acceptance limits that are inadequate for phenotyping. To overcome this difficulty, we present a protocol for gradient calibration quality assurance testing, based on a 3D-printed, open source, structural phantom that can be customised to the dimensions of individual scanners and RF coils. In trials on a 9.4 T system, the gradient scaling errors were reduced by an order of magnitude, and displacements of greater than 100 µm, caused by gradient non-linearity, were corrected using a post-processing technique. The step-by-step protocol can be integrated into routine pre-clinical MRI quality assurance to measure and correct for these errors. We suggest that this type of quality assurance is essential for robust pre-clinical MRI experiments that rely on accurate imaging gradients, including small animal phenotyping and diffusion MR.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4013024?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James O'Callaghan
Jack Wells
Simon Richardson
Holly Holmes
Yichao Yu
Simon Walker-Samuel
Bernard Siow
Mark F Lythgoe
spellingShingle James O'Callaghan
Jack Wells
Simon Richardson
Holly Holmes
Yichao Yu
Simon Walker-Samuel
Bernard Siow
Mark F Lythgoe
Is your system calibrated? MRI gradient system calibration for pre-clinical, high-resolution imaging.
PLoS ONE
author_facet James O'Callaghan
Jack Wells
Simon Richardson
Holly Holmes
Yichao Yu
Simon Walker-Samuel
Bernard Siow
Mark F Lythgoe
author_sort James O'Callaghan
title Is your system calibrated? MRI gradient system calibration for pre-clinical, high-resolution imaging.
title_short Is your system calibrated? MRI gradient system calibration for pre-clinical, high-resolution imaging.
title_full Is your system calibrated? MRI gradient system calibration for pre-clinical, high-resolution imaging.
title_fullStr Is your system calibrated? MRI gradient system calibration for pre-clinical, high-resolution imaging.
title_full_unstemmed Is your system calibrated? MRI gradient system calibration for pre-clinical, high-resolution imaging.
title_sort is your system calibrated? mri gradient system calibration for pre-clinical, high-resolution imaging.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description High-field, pre-clinical MRI systems are widely used to characterise tissue structure and volume in small animals, using high resolution imaging. Both applications rely heavily on the consistent, accurate calibration of imaging gradients, yet such calibrations are typically only performed during maintenance sessions by equipment manufacturers, and potentially with acceptance limits that are inadequate for phenotyping. To overcome this difficulty, we present a protocol for gradient calibration quality assurance testing, based on a 3D-printed, open source, structural phantom that can be customised to the dimensions of individual scanners and RF coils. In trials on a 9.4 T system, the gradient scaling errors were reduced by an order of magnitude, and displacements of greater than 100 µm, caused by gradient non-linearity, were corrected using a post-processing technique. The step-by-step protocol can be integrated into routine pre-clinical MRI quality assurance to measure and correct for these errors. We suggest that this type of quality assurance is essential for robust pre-clinical MRI experiments that rely on accurate imaging gradients, including small animal phenotyping and diffusion MR.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4013024?pdf=render
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