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Abstract #3371

Fast Bilateral Breast Coverage with SENSE-Accelerated High Spectral and Spatial Resolution (HiSS) MRI

Milica Medved1, Hiroyuki Abe1, Gillian M. Newstead1, Marko K. Ivancevic2, Olufunmilayo I. Olopade3, Gregory S. Karczmar1

1Radiology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States; 2Philips Healthcare, Cleveland, OH, United States; 3Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States

A new technical development implements SENSE imaging to high spatial and spectral resolution (HiSS) MRI, via a software patch, allowing fast bilateral breast MR imaging with increased in-plane resolution. This opens up new applications, such as non-contrast screening and breast density measurement for breast cancer risk assessment.

Keywords

accelerated acceleration achieved acquisition acquisitions administration agent allow another application approved arrow artifacts audience available axial bearing bilateral bottom breast breasts calculation cancer channel chemical clinical clinically coil commercially compliant consent contrast coverage decrease dedicated density detailed developing diagnostic domain dynamic earlier echoes encoding enhanced evaluation even excellent existing experience fast feasibility feasible field fitting fold frequency full function gave generated guide healthy height hiss human identification implementation implemented implementing informed integral invasive inversion lesion lesions localized mainly mapping medical medicine morphologic morphology noise oncologists participate patch patient peak physicists planar post potentially preliminary preserved processed processing produced prohibitively proportional proton providing pure qualitative quantitative quantities radiologists radiology related reliable replace representative resolution robust satisfactory scanned selective sense sensitivity separate slice slices slow software spatial spectral spectrally spectroscopic spectrum structure subjects subtracting superior suppressed suppression target thick tissue typical unilateral versus view visible visualize volunteers water whole