The influence of flow and motion in MRI of diffusion using a modified CE‐FAST sequence

Abstract
Severe motion and flow artifacts are a problem in MRI of diffusion in vivo due to the application of strong magnetic field gradients. Here it is shown that image artifacts can be removed by using a modified fast-scan MRI sequence (CE-FAST) in conjunction with averaging of diffusion-weighted images. In phantom studies slow (coherent) flow (-1) in the presence of strong diffusion gradients is shown to cause signal losses in diffusion-weighted images that depend on the relative orientations of the flow direction and the diffusion gradient. On the other hand, pulsatile motions of macroscopic dimensions (e.g. 1 mm, 1 Hz, in-plane) lead to smearing and ghosting of signal intensities along the phase-encoding direction of the images. In both phantoms and rabbit brains in vivo motion artifacts were found to be reducible by averaging 8-16 images. Unfortunately. the resulting image contrast no longer represents a “true” diffusion contrast but is affected by additional signal losses due to motion averaging. All experiments were performed on a 40-cm-borc 2.35-T Bruker Medspee system. © 1989 Academic Press, Inc.