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1.
PurposeTo develop and validate an accelerated free-breathing 3D whole-heart magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) technique using a radial k-space trajectory with compressed sensing and curvelet transform.MethodA 3D radial phyllotaxis trajectory was implemented to traverse the centerline of k-space immediately before the segmented whole-heart MRA data acquisition at each cardiac cycle. The k-space centerlines were used to correct the respiratory-induced heart motion in the acquired MRA data. The corrected MRA data were then reconstructed by a novel compressed sensing algorithm using curvelets as the sparsifying domain. The proposed 3D whole-heart MRA technique (radial CS curvelet) was then prospectively validated against compressed sensing with a conventional wavelet transform (radial CS wavelet) and a standard Cartesian acquisition in terms of scan time and border sharpness.ResultsFifteen patients (females 10, median age 34-year-old) underwent 3D whole-heart MRA imaging using a standard Cartesian trajectory and our proposed radial phyllotaxis trajectory. Scan time for radial phyllotaxis was significantly shorter than Cartesian (4.88 ± 0.86 min. vs. 6.84 ± 1.79 min., P-value = 0.004). Radial CS curvelet border sharpness was slightly lower than Cartesian and, for the majority of vessels, was significantly better than radial CS wavelet (P-value < 0.050).ConclusionThe proposed technique of 3D whole-heart MRA acquisition with a radial CS curvelet has a shorter scan time and slightly lower vessel sharpness compared to the Cartesian acquisition with radial profile ordering, and has slightly better sharpness than radial CS wavelet. Future work on this technique includes additional clinical trials and extending this technique to 3D cine imaging.  相似文献   

2.
Dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) MRI is widely acknowledged to be a helpful tool in the diagnosis and differentiation of tumors. In common clinical settings, the dynamic changes described by the time-intensity curves (TICs) are evaluated to find patterns of atypical tissue behavior, i.e., areas characterized by rapid contrast wash-in and wash-out. Despite the ease of this approach, there is no consensus about the specificity of the TIC shapes in discriminating tumor grades. We explore a new way of looking at TICs, where these are not averaged over a selected region of interest (ROI), but rendered pixel-by-pixel. In this way, the characteristic of the tissue is not given as a single TIC classification but as a distribution of the different TIC patterns. We applied this method in a group of patients with chondroid tumors and compared its outcome with the outcome of the standard ROI-based averaged TIC analysis. Furthermore, we focused on the problem of ROI selection in these tumors and how this affects the outcome of the TIC analysis. Finally, we investigated what relationship exists between the "standard" DCE-MRI parameter maximum enhancement (ME) and the TIC shape. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that, where the ROI approach fails to show the presence of areas of rapid contrast wash-in and wash-out, the pixel-by-pixel approach reveals the coexistence of a heterogeneous pattern of TIC shapes. Secondly, we point out the differences in the DCE MRI parameters and tumor volume that can result when selecting the tumor based on DCE parameter maps or post-contrast T1-weighted images. Finally, we show that ME maps and TIC shape maps highlight different tissue areas and, therefore, the use of the ME maps is not appropriate for the correct identification of areas of atypical TICs.  相似文献   

3.
PurposeThe purpose of this study was to evaluate the performance of motion-weighted Golden-angle RAdial Sparse Parallel MRI (motion-weighted GRASP) for free-breathing dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) of the lung.MethodsMotion-weighted GRASP incorporates a soft-gating motion compensation algorithm into standard GRASP reconstruction, so that motion-corrupted motion k-space (e.g., k-space acquired in inspiratory phases) contributes less to the final reconstructed images. Lung MR data from 20 patients (mean age = 57.9 ± 13.5) with known pulmonary lesions were retrospectively collected for this study. Each subject underwent a free-breathing DCE-MR scan using a fat-statured T1-weighted stack-of-stars golden-angle radial sequence and a post-contrast breath-hold MR scan using a Cartesian volumetric-interpolated imaging sequence (BH-VIBE). Each radial dataset was reconstructed using GRASP without motion compensation and motion-weighted GRASP. All MR images were visually evaluated by two experienced radiologists blinded to reconstruction and acquisition schemes independently. In addition, the influence of motion-weighted reconstruction on dynamic contrast-enhancement patterns was also investigated.ResultsFor image quality assessment, motion-weighted GRASP received significantly higher visual scores than GRASP (P < 0.05) for overall image quality (3.68 vs. 3.39), lesion conspicuity (3.54 vs. 3.18) and overall artifact level (3.53 vs. 3.15). There was no significant difference (P > 0.05) between the breath-hold BH-VIBE and motion-weighted GRASP images. For assessment of temporal fidelity, motion-weighted GRASP maintained a good agreement with respect to GRASP.ConclusionMotion-weighted GRASP achieved better reconstruction performance in free-breathing DCE-MRI of the lung compared to standard GRASP, and it may enable improved assessment of pulmonary lesions.  相似文献   

4.
PurposeWhile O-Space imaging is well known to accelerate image acquisition beyond traditional Cartesian sampling, its advantages compared to undersampled radial imaging, the linear trajectory most akin to O-Space imaging, have not been detailed. In addition, previous studies have focused on ultrafast imaging with very high acceleration factors and relatively low resolution. The purpose of this work is to directly compare O-Space and radial imaging in their potential to deliver highly undersampled images of high resolution and minimal artifacts, as needed for diagnostic applications. We report that the greatest advantages to O-Space imaging are observed with extended data acquisition readouts.Theory and methodsA sampling strategy that uses high resolution readouts is presented and applied to compare the potential of radial and O-Space sequences to generate high resolution images at high undersampling factors. Simulations and phantom studies were performed to investigate whether use of extended readout windows in O-Space imaging would increase k-space sampling and improve image quality, compared to radial imaging.ResultsExperimental O-Space images acquired with high resolution readouts show fewer artifacts and greater sharpness than radial imaging with equivalent scan parameters. Radial images taken with longer readouts show stronger undersampling artifacts, which can cause small or subtle image features to disappear. These features are preserved in a comparable O-Space image.ConclusionsHigh resolution O-Space imaging yields highly undersampled images of high resolution and minimal artifacts. The additional nonlinear gradient field improves image quality beyond conventional radial imaging.  相似文献   

5.
This paper presents a nonlinear profile order scheme for three-dimensional(3D) hybrid radial acquisition applied to self-gated, free-breathing cardiac cine magnetic resonance imaging(MRI). In self-gated, free-breathing cardiac cine MRI,respiratory and cardiac motions are unpredictable during acquisition, especially for retrospective reconstruction. Therefore,the non-uniformity of the k-space distribution is an issue of great concern during retrospective self-gated reconstruction. A nonlinear profile order with varying azimuthal increments was provided and compared with the existing golden ratio-based profile order. Optimal parameter values for the nonlinear formula were chosen based on simulations. The two profile orders were compared in terms of the k-space distribution and phantom and human image results. An approximately uniform distribution was obtained based on the nonlinear profile order for persons with various heart rates and breathing patterns.The nonlinear profile order provides more stable profile distributions and fewer streaking artifacts in phantom images. In a comparison of human cardiac cine images, the nonlinear profile order provided results comparable to those provided by the golden ratio-based profile order, and the images were suitable for diagnosis. In conclusion, the nonlinear profile order scheme was demonstrated to be insensitive to various motion patterns and more useful for retrospective reconstruction.  相似文献   

6.
Radial imaging techniques, such as projection-reconstruction (PR), are used in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for dynamic imaging, angiography, and short-T2 imaging. They are less sensitive to flow and motion artifacts, and support fast imaging with short echo times. However, aliasing and streaking artifacts are two main sources which degrade radial imaging quality. For a given fixed number of k-space projections, data distributions along radial and angular directions will influence the level of aliasing and streaking artifacts. Conventional radial k-space sampling trajectory introduces an aliasing artifact at the first principal ring of point spread function (PSF). In this paper, a shaking projection (SP) k-space sampling trajectory was proposed to reduce aliasing artifacts in MR images. SP sampling trajectory shifts the projection alternately along the k-space center, which separates k-space data in the azimuthal direction. Simulations based on conventional and SP sampling trajectories were compared with the same number projections. A significant reduction of aliasing artifacts was observed using the SP sampling trajectory. These two trajectories were also compared with different sampling frequencies. ASP trajectory has the same aliasing character when using half sampling frequency (or half data) for reconstruction. SNR comparisons with different white noise levels show that these two trajectories have the same SNR character. In conclusion, the SP trajectory can reduce the aliasing artifact without decreasing SNR and also provide a way for undersampling recon- struction. Furthermore, this method can be applied to three-dimensional (3D) hybrid or spherical radial k-space sampling for a more efficient reduction of aliasing artifacts.  相似文献   

7.
Diffusion-weighted three-dimensional MP-RAGE MR imaging   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The advantages of three-dimensional (3D) acquisition are that you obtain thinner and more slices with better profiles, and better signal-to-noise ratio for an equivalent slice thickness. Three-dimensional acquisition is preferable for obtaining contiguous thin-slice MR images. However, the acquisition time extends compared with the two-dimensional acquisition because the second phase-encode axis is applied by the 3D acquisition. Therefore, 3D acquisition should be a high-speed imaging method. In this paper, a new diffusion-sensitive 3D magnetization-prepared rapid gradient-echo (3D MP-RAGE) sequence was studied. In this sequence, a preparation phase with a 90 degrees RF-motion proving gradient (MPG): MPG-180 degrees RF-MPG-90 degrees RF pulse train (diffusion-weighted driven-equilibrium Fourier transform) was used to sensitize the magnetization to diffusion. Centric k-space acquisition order is necessary to minimize saturation effects from tissues with short relaxation times. From phantom experimental results, the effect of the diffusion weighting was changed by the centric vs. sequential k-space acquisition order. The effect of centric k-space acquisition order was larger than the effect of sequential k-space acquisition order. The contrast of centric k-space acquisition order became equal to the contrast of conventional diffusion-weighted spin echo. From rat experimental results, small isotropic diffusion-weighted image data (voxel size: 0.625 x 0.625 x 0.625 mm3) were obtained. This sequence was useful in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
PurposeTo compare the imaging characteristics of the volumetric-interpolated breath-hold examination (VIBE) using compressed-sensing (CS) acceleration (CS-VIBE) with the conventional sequence relying on parallel imaging to assess the potential use of CS-VIBE as a functional imaging technique for upper abdominal haemodynamics.Materials and methodsPatients (30 men, 27 women) suspected of having a hepatic disease underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the liver, including a dynamic contrast-enhanced study. Gadolinium-ethoxybenzyl-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid was used as the contrast agent. MRI data of two multi-phase breath-hold exams were used for intra-individual comparisons. The VIBE and CS-VIBE were performed on different days. Image quality in both sequences was qualitatively assessed by three experienced radiologists. Moreover, the contrast ratio (CR) of the aorta, portal vein, liver and pancreas to muscle tissue were measured as a quantitative assessment. For the CS-VIBE, a five-phase time–intensity curve (TIC) was created to evaluate haemodynamics. The measurement area included the pancreas, common hepatic artery, portal vein and superior mesenteric vein. The ratio of that area to the muscle tissue in the same cross section was used to create the TICs.ResultsThe qualitative assessment showed that artefacts were significantly different between the VIBE and CS-VIBE sequences. This finding indicated that the conventional VIBE had fewer artefacts. The CR was significantly higher for the CS-VIBE than for the VIBE images in all phases (p < 0.001). An evaluation of haemodynamics compared with those obtained by CT angiography showed almost the same temporal characteristics in the common hepatic artery, portal vein and superior mesenteric vein signals as those in a previous study.ConclusionCompared with the conventional VIBE, the CS-VIBE had significantly higher temporal resolution and higher image contrast. The temporal resolution of the CS-VIBE was sufficient for viewing abdominal haemodynamics. If the remaining limitation of acquisition speed for dynamic MRI can be adequately addressed, we believe that CS-VIBE functional images with high-contrast haemodynamics will be very useful in clinical practise.  相似文献   

9.
PurposeSingle image super-resolution (SR) is highly desired in many fields but obtaining it is often technically limited in practice. The purpose of this study was to propose a simple, rapid and robust single image SR method in magnetic resonance (MR) imaging (MRI).MethodsThe idea is based on the mathematical formulation of the intrinsic link in k-space between a given (modulus) low-resolution (LR) image and the desired SR image. The method consists of two steps: 1) estimating the low-frequency k-space data of the desired SR image from a single LR image; 2) reconstructing the SR image using the estimated low-frequency and zero-filled high-frequency k-space data. The method was evaluated on digital phantom images, physical phantom MR images and real brain MR images, and compared with existing SR methods.ResultsThe proposed SR method exhibited a good robustness by reaching a clearly higher PSNR (25.77dB) and SSIM (0.991) averaged over different noise levels in comparison with existing edge-guided nonlinear interpolation (EGNI) (PSNR=23.78dB, SSIM=0.983), zero-filling (ZF) (PSNR=24.09dB, SSIM=0.985) and total variation (TV) (PSNR=24.54dB, SSIM=0.987) methods while presenting the same order of computation time as the ZF method but being much faster than the EGNI or TV method. The average PSNR or SSIM over different slice images of the proposed method (PSNR=26.33 dB or SSIM=0.955) was also higher than the EGNI (PSNR=25.07dB or SSIM=0.952), ZF (PSNR=24.97dB or SSIM=0.950) and TV (PSNR=25.70dB or SSIM=0.953) methods, demonstrating its good robustness to variation in anatomical structure of the images. Meanwhile, the proposed method always produced less ringing artifacts than the ZF method, gave a clearer image than the EGNI method, and did not exhibit any blocking effect presented in the TV method. In addition, the proposed method yielded the highest spatial consistency in the inter-slice dimension among the four methods.ConclusionsThis study proposed a fast, robust and efficient single image SR method with high spatial consistency in the inter-slice dimension for clinical MR images by estimating the low-frequency k-space data of the desired SR image from a single spatial modulus LR image.  相似文献   

10.
It is shown that the threshold interaction constant (TIC) αD for the existence of a condensed phase increases with the dimension D of a Bose system (α3 < α2 < α1). TICs are evaluated exactly for a wide class of two-parameter potentials (the latter may approximate real physical interactions). The results are applied to spin-polarized systems. The possibility of an electric field induced liquid-gas transition is discussed. The TIC for N-particle clusters diminishes with N.  相似文献   

11.
PurposeTo investigate the value of use of intravoxel incoherent motion diffusion-weighted imaging (IVIM-DWI) as an adjunct to dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) to distinguish benign from malignant breast lesions.Materials and methodsRetrospective analysis of data pertaining to 117 patients with breast lesions who underwent DCE-MRI and IVIM-DWI examination with 3.0 T MRI was conducted. A total of 128 lesions were pathologically confirmed (47 benign and 81 malignant). Between-group differences in DCE-MRI parameters (Morphology, enhancement pattern, maximum slope of increase (MSI) and time–signal curve (TIC) type) and IVIM-DWI parameters (f value, D value and D* value) were assessed. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to identify variables that distinguished benign from malignant breast lesions. The diagnostic performance of DCE-MRI and DCE-MRI plus IVIM-DWI, to distinguish benign from malignant breast lesions, was evaluated using pathology results as the gold standard.ResultsLesion morphology, MSI, and TIC type (P < 0.05), but not the enhancement pattern (P > 0.05), were significantly different between the benign and malignant groups. The f (8.53 ± 2.14) and D* (7.64 ± 2.07) values in the malignant group were significantly higher than those in the benign group (7.68 ± 1.97 and 6.83 ± 2.13, respectively), while the D value (0.99 ± 0.22) was significantly lower than that (1.34 ± 0.17) in the benign group (P < 0.05 for all). On logistic regression analysis, the sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of DCE-MRI were 90.1%, 70.2% and 82.8% respectively; the corresponding figures for the combination of IVIM-DWI and DCE-MRI were 88.8%, 85.1%, and 87.5%respectively.ConclusionIVIM-DWI method as an adjunct to DCE-MRI can improve the specificity and accuracy in differential diagnosis of benign and malignant lesions of breast.  相似文献   

12.
PurposeFast Field-Cycling (FFC) MRI is a novel technology that allows varying the main magnetic field B0 during the pulse sequence, from the nominal field (usually hundreds of millitesla) down to Earth's field or below. This technique uses resistive magnets powered by fast amplifiers. One of the challenges with this method is to stabilise the magnetic field during the acquisition of the NMR signal. Indeed, a typical consequence of field instability is small, random phase variations between each line of k-space resulting in artefacts, similar to those which occur due to homogeneous motion but harder to correct as no assumption can be made about the phase error, which appears completely random. Here we propose an algorithm that can correct for the random phase variations induced by field instabilities without prior knowledge about the phase error.MethodsThe algorithm exploits the fact that ghosts caused by field instability manifest in image regions which should be signal free. The algorithm minimises the signal in the background by finding an optimum phase correction for each line of k-space and repeats the operation until the result converges, leaving the background free of signal.ConclusionWe showed the conditions for which the algorithm is robust and successfully applied it on images acquired on FFC-MRI scanners. The same algorithm can be used for various applications other than Fast Field-Cycling MRI.  相似文献   

13.
Improved matrix inversion in image plane parallel MRI   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A new 3D parallel magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) method named Generalized Unaliasing Incorporating Support constraint and sensitivity Encoding (GUISE) is presented. GUISE allows direct image recovery from arbitrary Cartesian k-space trajectories. However, periodic k-space sampling patterns are considered for reconstruction efficiency. Image recovery methods such as 2D SENSE (SENSitivity Encoding) and 2D CAIPIRINHA (Controlled Aliasing In Parallel Imaging Results IN Higher Acceleration) are special instances of GUISE where specific restrictions are placed on the k-space sampling patterns used. It is shown that the sampling pattern has large impacts on the image reconstruction error due to noise. An efficient sampling pattern design method that incorporates prior knowledge of object support and coil sensitivity profile is proposed. It requires no experimental trials and could be used in clinical imaging. Comparison of the proposed sampling pattern design method with 2D SENSE and 2D CAIPIRINHA are made based on both simulation and experiment results. It is seen that this new adaptive sampling pattern design method results in a lower noise level in reconstructions due to better exploitation of the coil sensitivity variation and object support constraint. In addition, elimination of the non-object region from reconstruction potentially allows an acceleration factor higher than the number of receiver coils used.  相似文献   

14.
Combination of non-Cartesian trajectories with parallel MRI permits to attain unmatched acceleration rates when compared to traditional Cartesian MRI during real-time imaging. However, computationally demanding reconstructions of such imaging techniques, such as k-space domain radial generalized auto-calibrating partially parallel acquisitions (radial GRAPPA) and image domain conjugate gradient sensitivity encoding (CG-SENSE), lead to longer reconstruction times and unacceptable latency for online real-time MRI on conventional computational hardware. Though CG-SENSE has been shown to work with low-latency using a general purpose graphics processing unit (GPU), to the best of our knowledge, no such effort has been made for radial GRAPPA. Radial GRAPPA reconstruction, which is robust even with highly undersampled acquisitions, is not iterative, requiring only significant computation during initial calibration while achieving good image quality for low-latency imaging applications. In this work, we present a very fast, low-latency, reconstruction framework based on a heterogeneous system using multi-core CPUs and GPUs. We demonstrate an implementation of radial GRAPPA that permits reconstruction times on par with or faster than acquisition of highly accelerated datasets in both cardiac and dynamic musculoskeletal imaging scenarios. Acquisition and reconstruction times are reported.  相似文献   

15.
BackgroundThe classification of benign versus malignant breast lesions on multi-sequence Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is a challenging task since breast lesions are heterogeneous and complex. Recently, deep learning methods have been used for breast lesion diagnosis with raw image input. However, without the guidance of domain knowledge, these data-driven methods cannot ensure that the features extracted from images are comprehensive for breast cancer diagnosis. Specifically, these features are difficult to relate to clinically relevant phenomena.PurposeInspired by the cognition process of radiologists, we propose a Knowledge-driven Feature Learning and Integration (KFLI) framework, to discriminate between benign and malignant breast lesions using Multi-sequences MRI.MethodsStarting from sequence division based on characteristics, we use domain knowledge to guide the feature learning process so that the feature vectors of sub-sequence are constrained to lie in characteristic-related semantic space. Then, different deep networks are designed to extract various sub-sequence features. Furthermore, a weighting module is employed for the integration of the features extracted from different sub-sequence images adaptively.ResultsThe KFLI is a domain knowledge and deep network ensemble, which can extract sufficient and effective features from each sub-sequence for a comprehensive diagnosis of breast cancer. Experiments on 100 MRI studies have demonstrated that the KFLI achieves sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of 84.6%, 85.7% and 85.0%, respectively, which outperforms other state-of-the-art algorithms.  相似文献   

16.
PurposeTo develop an end-to-end deep learning solution for quickly reconstructing radial simultaneous multi-slice (SMS) myocardial perfusion datasets with comparable quality to the pixel tracking spatiotemporal constrained reconstruction (PT-STCR) method.MethodsDynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) radial SMS myocardial perfusion data were obtained from 20 subjects who were scanned at rest and/or stress with or without ECG gating using a saturation recovery radial CAIPI turboFLASH sequence. Input to the networks consisted of complex coil combined images reconstructed using the inverse Fourier transform of undersampled radial SMS k-space data. Ground truth images were reconstructed using the PT-STCR pipeline. The performance of the residual booster 3D U-Net was tested by comparing it to state-of-the-art network architectures including MoDL, CRNN-MRI, and other U-Net variants.ResultsResults demonstrate significant improvements in speed requiring approximately 8 seconds to reconstruct one radial SMS dataset which is approximately 200 times faster than the PT-STCR method. Images reconstructed with the residual booster 3D U-Net retain quality of ground truth PT-STCR images (0.963 SSIM/40.238 PSNR/0.147 NRMSE). The residual booster 3D U-Net has superior performance compared to existing network architectures in terms of image quality, temporal dynamics, and reconstruction time.ConclusionResidual and booster learning combined with the 3D U-Net architecture was shown to be an effective network for reconstructing high-quality images from undersampled radial SMS datasets while bypassing the reconstruction time of the PT-STCR method.  相似文献   

17.
ObjectiveTo test the performance of free-breathing Dynamic Contrast-Enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) using a radial volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination (VIBE) sequence combined with diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) for quantitative solitary pulmonary nodule (SPN) assessment.MethodsA total of 67 SPN cases receiving routine MRI routine scans, DWI, and dynamic-enhanced MRI in our hospital from May 2017 to November 2018 were collected. These cases were divided into a malignant group and a benign group according to the characteristics of the SPNs. The quantitative DCE-MRI parameters (Ktrans, Kep, Ve) and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values of the nodules were measured.ResultsThe Ktrans and Kep values in the malignant group were higher than those in the benign group, while the ADC values in the malignant group were lower than those in the benign group. Furthermore, the Ktrans value of adenocarcinoma was higher than that of squamous cell carcinoma and small cell carcinoma (P < 0.05). The Ve value was significantly different between non-small cell carcinoma and small cell carcinoma (P < 0.05). With an ADC value of 0.98 × 10−3 mm2/s as the threshold, the specificity and sensitivity to diagnose benign and malignant nodules was 90.6% and 80%, respectively.ConclusionHigh-temporal-resolution DCE-MRI using the r-VIBE technique in combination with DWI could contribute to pulmonary nodule analysis and possibly serve as a potential alternative to distinguish malignant from benign nodules as well as differentiate different types of malignancies.  相似文献   

18.
Reduced field-of-view (rFOV) imaging was introduced recently as a rapid imaging technique that improves temporal resolution while maintaining spatial resolution. It is based on undersampling in k-space and utilizes the fact that the dynamics of an evolving process are often confined to a local area within the full FOV. In the work presented here the reduced FOV approach is applied to projection-reconstruction MRI and compared to the original spin-warp implementation. Results are presented that clearly demonstrate the increased robustness of the projection-reconstruction version of rFOV imaging. The technique is successfully applied to an MR-guided biopsy scenario (ex-vivo) and to cine cardiac imaging. Finally an algorithm is proposed that uses the intrinsic advantages of radial k-space sampling to evaluate the projection data to control the adjustment of position and size of the reduced FOV window.  相似文献   

19.
The purpose of this study is to compare two types of sequences in brain magnetic resonance (MR) examinations of uncooperative and cooperative patients. For each group of patients, the pairs of sequences that were compared were two T2-weighted (T2-W) fluid attenuated inversion recovery sequences with different k-space trajectories (conventional Cartesian and BLADE) and two T2-TSE weighted with different k-space trajectories (conventional Cartesian and BLADE). Twenty-three consecutive uncooperative patients and 44 cooperative patients, who routinely underwent brain MR imaging examination, participated in the study. Both qualitative and quantitative analyses were performed based on the signal-to-noise ratio, contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), and relative contrast (ReCon) measures of normal anatomic structures. The qualitative analysis was performed by experienced radiologists. Also, the presence of motion, other (e.g., Gibbs, susceptibility artifacts, phase encoding from vessels) artifacts and pulsatile flow artifacts was evaluated.  相似文献   

20.
PurposeTo present a method that uses a novel free-running self-gated acquisition to achieve isotropic resolution in whole heart 3D Cartesian cardiac CINE MRI.Material and methods3D cardiac CINE MRI using navigator gating results in long acquisition times. Recently, several frameworks based on self-gated non-Cartesian trajectories have been proposed to accelerate this acquisition. However, non-Cartesian reconstructions are computationally expensive due to gridding, particularly in 3D. In this work, we propose a novel highly efficient self-gated Cartesian approach for 3D cardiac CINE MRI. Acquisition is performed using CArtesian trajectory with Spiral PRofile ordering and Tiny golden angle step for eddy current reduction (so called here CASPR-Tiger). Data is acquired continuously under free breathing (retrospective ECG gating, no preparation pulses interruption) for 4–5 min and 4D whole-heart volumes (3D + cardiac phases) with isotropic spatial resolution are reconstructed from all available data using a soft gating technique combined with temporal total variation (TV) constrained iterative SENSE reconstruction.ResultsFor data acquired on eight healthy subjects and three patients, the reconstructed images using the proposed method had good contrast and spatio-temporal variations, correctly recovering diastolic and systolic cardiac phases. Non-significant differences (P > 0.05) were observed in cardiac functional measurements obtained with proposed 3D approach and gold standard 2D multi-slice breath-hold acquisition.ConclusionThe proposed approach enables isotropic 3D whole heart Cartesian cardiac CINE MRI in 4 to 5 min free breathing acquisition.  相似文献   

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