Prepolarized MRI of hard tissues and solid-state matter.
Jose Borreguero MorataJosé M GonzálezEduardo PallásJuan P RiglaJosé M AlgarínRubén BoschFernando GalveDaniel Grau-RuizRuben Pellicer-GuridiAlfonso RíosJosé María Benlloch BavieraJoseba AlonsoPublished in: NMR in biomedicine (2022)
Prepolarized MRI (PMRI) is a long-established technique conceived to counteract the loss in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) inherent to low-field MRI systems. When it comes to hard biological tissues and solid-state matter, PMRI is severely restricted by their ultra-short characteristic relaxation times. Here we demonstrate that efficient hard-tissue prepolarization is within reach with a special-purpose 0.26 T scanner designed for ex vivo dental MRI and equipped with suitable high-power electronics. We have characterized the performance of a 0.5 T prepolarizer module, which can be switched on and off in 200 μs. To this end, we have used resin, dental and bone samples, all with T 1 times of the order of 20 ms at our field strength. The measured SNR enhancement is in good agreement with a simple theoretical model, and deviations in extreme regimes can be attributed to mechanical vibrations due to the magnetic interaction between the prepolarization and main magnets.