Balanced steady-state free precession imaging has recently been suggested for chemical exchange detection (bSSFPX). The objective of this work is to investigate the contributions of microstructural, chemical shift and chemical exchange effects to the asymmetry of the bSSFP profile at field strengths of 3 T and 9.4 T. To this end, in vitro bSSFPX experiments are performed for a range of repetition times and flip angles in glucose water solutions with different MnCl 2 concentrations and tissue homogenates obtained from the brainstem of pig brains. The experimental results are compared to multi-pool Bloch-McConnell simulations. Additionally, the influence of white matter tract geometry is analyzed ex vivo in pig brain hemispheres measured at two different angles with respect to B 0 .The detectable bSSFP profile asymmetry in glucose solutions with tissue-like relaxation times and white matter homogenates was consistent with Bloch-McConnell simulations but relatively small. In intact white matter tracts, the asymmetry was dominated by structural effects with a strong dependency on tract orientation relative to B 0 . In tracts perpendicular to B 0 , the asymmetry was ≈ 3-4 times higher than in the homogenates, thus barely affected by chemical exchange effects. In conclusion, chemical exchange-related bSSFP profile asymmetries are detectable in tissue homogenates, however, the observed asymmetry level is generally low and prone to confounding structural effects rendering in vivo chemical exchange detection with bSSFP challenging in the brain.
KEYWORDSbSSFP, profile asymmetry, chemical exchange, glucose, white matter, pig brain
| INTRODUCTIONThe MR signal acquired with a balanced steady-state free precession (bSSFP) sequence is known to be considerably off-resonance sensitive 1 and thus to carry information about the frequency content in a voxel. Tissues can generally not be described by a single T 1 , T 2 , and resonance Abbreviations: AI, asymmetry index; AREX, apparent exchange-dependent relaxation; APT, amide proton transfer; B 0 /B 1 , static/transmit magnetic field; bSSFP, balanced steady-state free