Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 30
Filter
1.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 8974, 2024 04 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38637577

ABSTRACT

Fully CMR-guided electrophysiological interventions (EP-CMR) have recently been introduced but data on the optimal CMR imaging protocol are scarce. This study determined the clinical utility of 3D non-selective whole heart steady-state free precession imaging using compressed SENSE (nsWHcs) for automatic segmentation of cardiac cavities as the basis for targeted catheter navigation during EP-CMR cavo-tricuspid isthmus ablation. Fourty-two consecutive patients with isthmus-dependent right atrial flutter underwent EP-CMR radiofrequency ablations. nsWHcs succeeded in all patients (nominal scan duration, 98 ± 10 s); automatic segmentation/generation of surface meshes of right-sided cavities exhibited short computation times (16 ± 3 s) with correct delineation of right atrium, right ventricle, tricuspid annulus and coronary sinus ostium in 100%, 100%, 100% and 95%, respectively. Point-by-point ablation adhered to the predefined isthmus line in 62% of patients (26/42); activation mapping confirmed complete bidirectional isthmus block (conduction time difference, 136 ± 28 ms). nsWHcs ensured automatic and reliable 3D segmentation of targeted endoluminal cavities, multiplanar reformatting and image fusion (e.g. activation time measurements) and represented the basis for precise real-time active catheter navigation during EP-CMR ablations of isthmus-dependent right atrial flutter. Hence, nsWHcs can be considered a key component in order to advance EP-CMR towards the ultimate goal of targeted substrate-based ablation procedures.


Subject(s)
Atrial Flutter , Catheter Ablation , Humans , Atrial Flutter/diagnostic imaging , Atrial Flutter/surgery , Surgical Mesh , Catheter Ablation/methods , Heart Atria/diagnostic imaging , Heart Atria/surgery , Arrhythmias, Cardiac , Treatment Outcome
3.
Magn Reson Med ; 89(5): 2005-2013, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36585913

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To evaluate a silent MR active catheter tracking sequence that allows conducting catheter interventions with low acoustic noise levels. METHODS: To reduce the acoustic noise associated with MR catheter tracking, we implemented a technique previously used in conventional MRI. The gradient waveforms are modified to reduce the sound pressure level (SPL) and avoid acoustic resonances of the MRI system. The efficacy of the noise reduction was assessed by software-predicted SPL and verified by measurements. Furthermore, the quality of the catheter tracking signal was assessed in a phantom experiment and during interventional cardiovascular MRI sessions targeted at isthmus-related flutter ablation. RESULTS: The maximum measured SPL in the scanner room was 104 dB(A) for real-time imaging, and 88 dB(A) and 69 dB(A) for conventional and silent tracking, respectively. The SPL measured at different positions in the MR suite using silent tracking were 65-69 dB(A), and thus within the range of a normal conversation. Equivalent signal quality and tracking accuracy were obtained using the silent variant of the catheter tracking sequence. CONCLUSION: Our results indicate that silent MR catheter tracking capabilities are identical to conventional catheter tracking. The achieved acoustic noise reduction comes at no penalty in terms of tracking quality or temporal resolution, improves comfort and safety, and can overcome the need for MR-compatible communication equipment and background noise suppression during the actual interventional procedure.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Interventional , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Catheters , Software , Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Interventional/methods , Phantoms, Imaging
4.
Magn Reson Med ; 89(3): 977-989, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36346081

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To develop a free-breathing (FB) 2D radial balanced steady-state free precession cine cardiac MRI method with 100% respiratory gating efficiency using respiratory auto-calibrated motion correction (RAMCO) based on a motion-sensing camera. METHODS: The signal from a respiratory motion-sensing camera was recorded during a FB retrospectively electrocardiogram triggered 2D radial balanced steady-state free precession acquisition using pseudo-tiny-golden-angle ordering. With RAMCO, for each acquisition the respiratory signal was retrospectively auto-calibrated by applying different linear translations, using the resulting in-plane image sharpness as a criterium. The auto-calibration determines the optimal magnitude of the linear translations for each of the in-plane directions to minimize motion blurring caused by bulk respiratory motion. Additionally, motion-weighted density compensation was applied during radial gridding to minimize through-plane and non-bulk motion blurring. Left ventricular functional parameters and sharpness scores of FB radial cine were compared with and without RAMCO, and additionally with conventional breath-hold Cartesian cine on 9 volunteers. RESULTS: FB radial cine with RAMCO had similar sharpness scores as conventional breath-hold Cartesian cine and the left ventricular functional parameters agreed. For FB radial cine, RAMCO reduced respiratory motion artifacts with a statistically significant difference in sharpness scores (P < 0.05) compared to reconstructions without motion correction. CONCLUSION: 2D radial cine imaging with RAMCO allows evaluation of left ventricular functional parameters in FB with 100% respiratory efficiency. It eliminates the need for breath-holds, which is especially valuable for patients with no or impaired breath-holding capacity. Validation of the proposed method on patients is warranted.


Subject(s)
Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine , Ventricular Function, Left , Humans , Breath Holding , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine/methods , Respiration , Retrospective Studies , Ventricular Function, Left/physiology
5.
Front Cardiovasc Med ; 9: 884221, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35571164

ABSTRACT

Introduction: To develop and test the feasibility of free-breathing (FB), high-resolution quantitative first-pass perfusion cardiac MR (FPP-CMR) using dual-echo Dixon (FOSTERS; Fat-water separation for mOtion-corrected Spatio-TEmporally accelerated myocardial peRfuSion). Materials and Methods: FOSTERS was performed in FB using a dual-saturation single-bolus acquisition with dual-echo Dixon and a dynamically variable Cartesian k-t undersampling (8-fold) approach, with low-rank and sparsity constrained reconstruction, to achieve high-resolution FPP-CMR images. FOSTERS also included automatic in-plane motion estimation and T 2 * correction to obtain quantitative myocardial blood flow (MBF) maps. High-resolution (1.6 x 1.6 mm2) FB FOSTERS was evaluated in eleven patients, during rest, against standard-resolution (2.6 x 2.6 mm2) 2-fold SENSE-accelerated breath-hold (BH) FPP-CMR. In addition, MBF was computed for FOSTERS and spatial wavelet-based compressed sensing (CS) reconstruction. Two cardiologists scored the image quality (IQ) of FOSTERS, CS, and standard BH FPP-CMR images using a 4-point scale (1-4, non-diagnostic - fully diagnostic). Results: FOSTERS produced high-quality images without dark-rim and with reduced motion-related artifacts, using an 8x accelerated FB acquisition. FOSTERS and standard BH FPP-CMR exhibited excellent IQ with an average score of 3.5 ± 0.6 and 3.4 ± 0.6 (no statistical difference, p > 0.05), respectively. CS images exhibited severe artifacts and high levels of noise, resulting in an average IQ score of 2.9 ± 0.5. MBF values obtained with FOSTERS presented a lower variance than those obtained with CS. Discussion: FOSTERS enabled high-resolution FB FPP-CMR with MBF quantification. Combining motion correction with a low-rank and sparsity-constrained reconstruction results in excellent image quality.

6.
J Cardiovasc Electrophysiol ; 32(8): 2090-2096, 2021 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34164862

ABSTRACT

AIMS: To illustrate the practical and technical challenges along with the safety aspects when performing MRI-guided electrophysiological procedures in a pre-existing diagnostic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) environment. METHODS AND RESULTS: A dedicated, well-trained multidisciplinary interventional cardiac MRI team (iCMR team), consisting of electrophysiologists, imaging cardiologists, radiologists, anaesthesiologists, MRI physicists, electrophysiological (EP) and MRI technicians, biomedical engineers, and medical instrumentation technologists is a prerequisite for a safe and feasible implementation of CMR-guided electrophysiological procedures (iCMR) in a pre-existing MRI environment. A formal dry run "mock-up" to address the entire spectrum of technical, logistic, and safety issues was performed before obtaining final approval of the Board of Directors. With this process we showed feasibility of our workflow, safety protocol, and bailout procedures during iCMR outside the conventional EP lab. The practical aspects of performing iCMR procedures in a pre-existing MRI environment were addressed and solidified. Finally, the influence on neighbouring MRI scanners was evaluated, showing no interference. CONCLUSION: Transforming a pre-existing diagnostic MRI environment into an iCMR suite is feasible and safe. However, performing iCMR procedures outside the conventional fluoroscopic lab, poses challenges with technical, practical, and safety aspects that need to be addressed by a dedicated multi-disciplinary iCMR team.


Subject(s)
Catheter Ablation , Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Interventional , Fluoroscopy , Heart , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/adverse effects
7.
J Magn Reson Imaging ; 54(2): 440-451, 2021 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33694310

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Respiratory gating is generally recommended in 4D flow MRI of the heart to avoid blurring and motion artifacts. Recently, a novel automated contact-less camera-based respiratory motion sensor has been introduced. PURPOSE: To compare camera-based respiratory gating (CAM) with liver-lung-navigator-based gating (NAV) and no gating (NO) for whole-heart 4D flow MRI. STUDY TYPE: Retrospective. SUBJECTS: Thirty two patients with a spectrum of cardiovascular diseases. FIELD STRENGTH/SEQUENCE: A 3T, 3D-cine spoiled-gradient-echo-T1-weighted-sequence with flow-encoding in three spatial directions. ASSESSMENT: Respiratory phases were derived and compared against each other by cross-correlation. Three radiologists/cardiologist scored images reconstructed with camera-based, navigator-based, and no respiratory gating with a 4-point Likert scale (qualitative analysis). Quantitative image quality analysis, in form of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and liver-lung-edge (LLE) for sharpness and quantitative flow analysis of the valves were performed semi-automatically. STATISTICAL TESTS: One-way repeated measured analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Wilks's lambda testing and follow-up pairwise comparisons. Significance level of P ≤ 0.05. Krippendorff's-alpha-test for inter-rater reliability. RESULTS: The respiratory signal analysis revealed that CAM and NAV phases were highly correlated (C = 0.93 ± 0.09, P < 0.01). Image scoring showed poor inter-rater reliability and no significant differences were observed (P ≥ 0.16). The image quality comparison showed that NAV and CAM were superior to NO with higher SNR (P = 0.02) and smaller LLE (P < 0.01). The quantitative flow analysis showed significant differences between the three respiratory-gated reconstructions in the tricuspid and pulmonary valves (P ≤ 0.05), but not in the mitral and aortic valves (P > 0.05). Pairwise comparisons showed that reconstructions without respiratory gating were different in flow measurements to either CAM or NAV or both, but no differences were found between CAM and NAV reconstructions. DATA CONCLUSION: Camera-based respiratory gating performed as well as conventional liver-lung-navigator-based respiratory gating. Quantitative image quality analysis showed that both techniques were equivalent and superior to no-gating-reconstructions. Quantitative flow analysis revealed local flow differences (tricuspid/pulmonary valves) in images of no-gating-reconstructions, but no differences were found between images reconstructed with camera-based and navigator-based respiratory gating. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 3 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 2.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Respiratory-Gated Imaging Techniques , Artifacts , Humans , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Reproducibility of Results , Retrospective Studies , Signal-To-Noise Ratio
8.
Magn Reson Med ; 85(1): 68-77, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32851711

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To develop a new 3D radial trajectory based on the natural spiral phyllotaxis (SP), with variable anisotropic FOV. THEORY & METHODS: A 3D radial trajectory based on the SP with favorable interleaving properties for cardiac imaging has been proposed by Piccini et al (Magn Reson Med. 2011;66:1049-1056), which supports a FOV with a fixed anisotropy. However, a fixed anisotropy can be inefficient when sampling objects with different anisotropic dimensions. We extend Larson's 3D radial method to provide variable anisotropic FOV for spiral phyllotaxis (VASP). Simulations were performed to measure distance between successive projections, analyze point spread functions, and compare aliasing artifacts for both VASP and conventional SP. VASP was fully implemented on a whole-body clinical MR scanner. Phantom and in vivo cardiac images were acquired at 1.5 tesla. RESULTS: Simulations, phantom, and in vivo experiments confirmed that VASP can achieve variable anisotropic FOV while maintaining the favorable interleaving properties of SP. For an anisotropic FOV with 100:100:35 ratio, VASP required ~65% fewer radial projections than the conventional SP to satisfy Nyquist criteria. Alternatively, when the same number of radial projections were used as in conventional SP, VASP produced fewer aliasing artifacts for anisotropic objects within the excited imaging volumes. CONCLUSION: We have developed a new method (VASP), which enables variable anisotropic FOV for 3D radial trajectory with SP. For anisotropic objects within the excited imaging volumes, VASP can reduce scan times and/or reduce aliasing artifacts.


Subject(s)
Image Enhancement , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Algorithms , Anisotropy , Artifacts , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Phantoms, Imaging
9.
Invest Radiol ; 56(5): 335-340, 2021 05 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33273374

ABSTRACT

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fifty consecutive patients with previous cardiac arrhythmias, scheduled for high-resolution 3D LGE MRI, were prospectively enrolled between October 2017 and February 2020. Free-breathing 3D dark-blood LGE MRI with high isotropic resolution (1.6 × 1.6 × 1.6 mm) was performed using a conventional fixed TI (n = 25) or a dynamic TI (n = 25). The average increase in blood nulling TI per minute was obtained from Look-Locker scans before and after the 3D acquisition in the first fixed TI group. This average increment in TI was used as input to calculate the dynamic increment of the initial blood nulling TI value as set in the second dynamic TI group. Regions of interest were drawn in the left ventricular blood pool to assess mean signal intensity as a measure for blood pool suppression. Overall image quality, observer confidence, and scar demarcation were scored on a 3-point scale. RESULTS: Three-dimensional dark-blood LGE data sets were successfully acquired in 46/50 patients (92%). The calculated average TI increase of 2.3 ± 0.5 ms/min obtained in the first fixed TI group was incorporated in the second dynamic TI group and led to a significant decrease of 72% in the mean blood pool signal intensity compared with the fixed TI group (P < 0.001). Overall image quality (P = 0.02), observer confidence (P = 0.02), and scar demarcation (P = 0.01) significantly improved using a dynamic TI. CONCLUSIONS: A steadily increasing dynamic TI improves blood pool suppression for optimized dark-blood contrast and increases observer confidence in free-breathing 3D dark-blood LGE MRI with high isotropic resolution.


Subject(s)
Contrast Media , Gadolinium , Cicatrix/pathology , Humans , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Respiration
10.
Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging ; 20(2): 147-156, 2019 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30307544

ABSTRACT

Aims: To determine safety and efficacy of electrophysiological cardiovascular magnetic resonance (EP-CMR)-guided radiofrequency (RF) ablation in patients with typical right atrial flutter in a routine clinical setting. Methods and results: Thirty patients with typical right atrial flutter underwent clinically indicated EP-CMR-guided cavotricuspid isthmus ablation. EP-CMR protocols included pre- and post-ablation CMR imaging (whole heart, T2-weighted, and early-/late-gadolinium enhancement) together with electroanatomic mapping of the right atrium. Coronary sinus cannulation time and total ablation procedure duration were used as performance measures to determine the learning experience of the EP-CMR interventionalist and for comparison with conventional, fluoroscopy-guided atrial flutter ablation. Procedural safety and success rates were evaluated at 1 week and 3 months follow-up. Safety and success rates of EP-CMR were similar to conventional flutter ablations (primary success rate, 93% vs. 100%; recurrence rate, 0% vs. 3%, respectively). EP-CMR procedure duration indicated a learning experience (first vs. last six patients, 54.2 ± 23.1 vs. 29.7 ± 20.0 min) and the minimum number of procedures needed to achieve a level of competency was n = 12. An isthmus angle <110° and the presence of pouch-like isthmus anatomy were indicative of significantly prolonged EP-CMR procedure duration. CMR-defined ablation lesion size was not associated with total RF-ablation time or RF-induced maximum temperature. Conclusion: In a routine clinical setting, EP-CMR demonstrated its safety and high efficacy for the treatment of typical right atrial flutter with performance and outcome measures similar to conventional, fluoroscopy-guided flutter ablation. Hence, EP-CMR represents a valid alternative to conventional right atrial flutter ablation.


Subject(s)
Atrial Flutter/surgery , Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Interventional , Radiofrequency Ablation , Workflow , Aged , Contrast Media , Electrocardiography , Female , Fluoroscopy , Humans , Male , Operative Time , Treatment Outcome
12.
Magn Reson Med ; 79(5): 2629-2641, 2018 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28905413

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To propose a simultaneous acquisition sequence for improved hepatic pharmacokinetics quantification accuracy (SAHA) method for liver dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI. METHODS: The proposed SAHA simultaneously acquired high temporal-resolution 2D images for vascular input function extraction using Cartesian sampling and 3D large-coverage high spatial-resolution liver dynamic contrast-enhanced images using golden angle stack-of-stars acquisition in an interleaved way. Simulations were conducted to investigate the accuracy of SAHA in pharmacokinetic analysis. A healthy volunteer and three patients with cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma were included in the study to investigate the feasibility of SAHA in vivo. RESULTS: Simulation studies showed that SAHA can provide closer results to the true values and lower root mean square error of estimated pharmacokinetic parameters in all of the tested scenarios. The in vivo scans of subjects provided fair image quality of both 2D images for arterial input function and portal venous input function and 3D whole liver images. The in vivo fitting results showed that the perfusion parameters of healthy liver were significantly different from those of cirrhotic liver and HCC. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed SAHA can provide improved accuracy in pharmacokinetic modeling and is feasible in human liver dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI, suggesting that SAHA is a potential tool for liver dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI. Magn Reson Med 79:2629-2641, 2018. © 2017 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.


Subject(s)
Contrast Media/pharmacokinetics , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Liver/diagnostic imaging , Liver/metabolism , Adult , Algorithms , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/diagnostic imaging , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/metabolism , Humans , Liver Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Liver Neoplasms/metabolism , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Male , Middle Aged , Phantoms, Imaging
13.
Magn Reson Med ; 79(4): 1922-1930, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28736949

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to propose, optimize, and validate a pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling (pCASL) sequence for simultaneous measurement of brain perfusion and labeling efficiency. METHODS: The proposed sequence incorporates the labeling efficiency measurement into the postlabeling delay period of a conventional perfusion pCASL sequence by using the time-encoding approach. In vivo validation experiments were performed on nine young subjects by comparing it to separate perfusion and labeling efficiency sequences. Sensitivity of the proposed combined sequence for measuring labeling efficiency changes was further addressed by varying the flip angles of the pCASL labeling radiofrequency pulses. RESULTS: The proposed combined sequence decreased the perfusion signal by ∼4% and a lower labeling efficiency (by ∼10%) was found as compared to the separate sequences. However, the temporal signal-noise-ratio of the perfusion signal remained unchanged. When the pCASL flip angle was decreased to a suboptimal setting, a strong correlation was found between the combined and the separate sequences for the relative change in pCASL perfusion signal as well as for the relative change in labeling efficiency. High correlation was also observed between relative changes in perfusion signal and the measured labeling efficiencies. CONCLUSION: The proposed sequence allows simultaneous measurement of brain perfusion and labeling efficiency with high time-efficiency at the price of only a small compromise in measurement accuracy. The additional labeling efficiency measurement can be used to facilitate qualitative interpretation of pCASL perfusion images. Magn Reson Med 79:1922-1930, 2018. © 2017 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.


Subject(s)
Arteries/diagnostic imaging , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Cerebrovascular Circulation , Magnetic Resonance Angiography/methods , Adult , Female , Healthy Volunteers , Humans , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Neuroimaging/methods , Perfusion , Reproducibility of Results , Signal-To-Noise Ratio , Spin Labels
14.
Magn Reson Med ; 79(1): 416-422, 2018 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28321900

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate a new inline motion compensation approach called image-based navigation with Constant Respiratory efficiency UsIng Single End-expiratory threshold (iNAV-CRUISE) for coronary MR angiography (CMRA). METHODS: The CRUISE gating technique was combined with iNAV motion correction and implemented inline for motion-compensated CMRA on a 1.5 Tesla scanner. The approach was compared to conventional diaphragmatic navigator gating (dNAVG) in 10 healthy subjects. The CMRA images were compared for vessel sharpness and visual score of the right coronary artery (RCA), left anterior descending artery (LAD), left circumflex, and scan time. RESULTS: The scan time was similar between the methods (dNAVG : 6:32 ± 1:09 vs. iNAV-CRUISE: 6:58 ± 0:17, P = not significant). However, the vessel sharpness of the RCA (dNAVG : 60.2 ± 10.1 vs. iNAV-CRUISE: 71.8 ± 8.9, P = 0.001) and LAD (dNAVG : 58.0 ± 8.0 vs. iNAV-CRUISE: 67.4 ± 7.1, P = 0.008) were significantly improved using iNAV-CRUISE. The visual score of the RCA was higher using iNAV-CRUISE compared to dNAVG (dNAVG : 3,4,3 vs. iNAV-CRUISE: 4,4,3, P < 0.01). CONCLUSION: The iNAV-CRUISE approach out-performs the conventional respiratory motion compensation technique in healthy subjects. Although scan time was comparable, the image quality was improved using iNAV-CRUISE. Magn Reson Med 79:416-422, 2018. © 2017 The Authors Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.


Subject(s)
Coronary Angiography , Heart/diagnostic imaging , Magnetic Resonance Angiography , Adult , Algorithms , Arteries/diagnostic imaging , Artifacts , Coronary Vessels/diagnostic imaging , Female , Healthy Volunteers , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Male , Motion , Respiration
16.
J Magn Reson Imaging ; 43(4): 947-55, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26451972

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to evaluate a recently developed two-dimensional (2D) image-based navigation approach (iNAVG+C ) combined with respiratory bellows gating for CMRA in patients with congenital heart disease. METHODS: Nine healthy volunteers (mean age 32 ± 6 years [standard deviation]) and 29 patients (28 ± 9 years) were scanned on a 1.5 Tesla clinical scanner using iNAV(G+C) motion compensated T2prepared CMRA, and the conventional 1D NAV approach. Scan time was recorded for each CMRA scan. An image quality score was given to each coronary artery from (0, uninterpretable; to 4, excellent image quality). Additionally, vessel sharpness of each coronary artery was measured. RESULTS: Average scan time was significantly shorter (P < 0.01) using the proposed iNAVC+G approach (7:57 ± 1:34) compared with 1D NAV (9:15 ± 3:02). Improved visual scores of the right coronary artery (iNAV(G+C) : 4,3,4 (median, 25th percentile, 75th percentile) versus 1D NAV: 3,3,4; P < 0.001) and left anterior descending artery (iNAV(G+C) : 3,3,4 versus 1D NAV: 3,2,3; P < 0.001) were obtained using iNAV(G+C) compared with 1D NAV as well as an increased vessel sharpness of the right coronary artery (iNAV(G+C) : 65.3% ± 6.6% (mean ± standard deviation) versus 1D NAV: 60.2% ± 11.4%; P < 0.05) and left anterior descending artery (iNAV(G+C) : 63.2% ± 6.7% versus 1D NAV: 58.3% ± 9.5%; P < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Image-based navigation in combination with respiratory bellows gating allows for more robust suppression of respiratory motion artifacts for whole-heart CMRA compared with conventional 1D NAV as images can be acquired in a shorter time and with improved image quality.


Subject(s)
Coronary Angiography , Coronary Vessels/diagnostic imaging , Coronary Vessels/pathology , Heart Defects, Congenital/diagnostic imaging , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Adult , Algorithms , Female , Healthy Volunteers , Heart Defects, Congenital/pathology , Humans , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Male , Motion , Observer Variation , Prospective Studies , Reproducibility of Results , Respiration , Respiratory-Gated Imaging Techniques/methods
17.
Phys Med Biol ; 60(2): 615-31, 2015 Jan 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25548990

ABSTRACT

In this study, we explore the potential of compressed sensing (CS) accelerated broadband 3D phase-encoded turbo spin-echo (3D-PE-TSE) for the purpose of geometrically undistorted imaging in the presence of field inhomogeneities. To achieve this goal 3D-PE-SE and 3D-PE-TSE sequences with broadband rf pulses and dedicated undersampling patterns were implemented on a clinical scanner. Additionally, a 3D multi-spectral spin-echo (ms3D-SE) sequence was implemented for reference purposes. First, we demonstrated the influence of susceptibility induced off-resonance effects on the spatial encoding of broadband 3D-SE, ms3D-SE, 3D-PE-SE and 3D-PE-TSE using a grid phantom containing a titanium implant (Δχ = 182 ppm) with x-ray CT as a gold standard. These experiments showed that the spatial encoding of 3D-PE-(T)SE was unaffected by susceptibility induced off-resonance effects, which caused geometrical distortions and/or signal hyper-intensities in broadband 3D-SE and, to a lesser extent, in ms3D-SE frequency encoded methods. Additionally, an SNR analysis was performed and the temporally resolved signal of 3D-PE-(T)SE sequences was exploited to retrospectively decrease the acquisition bandwidth and obtain field offset maps. The feasibility of CS acceleration was studied retrospectively and prospectively for the 3D-PE-SE sequence using an existing CS algorithm adapted for the reconstruction of 3D data with undersampling in all three phase encoded dimensions. CS was combined with turbo-acceleration by variable density undersampling and spherical stepwise T2 weighting by randomly sorting consecutive echoes in predefined spherical k-space layers. The CS-TSE combination resulted in an overall acceleration factor of 60, decreasing the original 3D-PE-SE scan time from 7 h to 7 min. Finally, CS accelerated 3D-PE-TSE in vivo images of a titanium screw were obtained within 10 min using a micro-coil demonstrating the feasibility of geometrically undistorted MRI near severe field inhomogeneities.


Subject(s)
Echo-Planar Imaging/methods , Hip/diagnostic imaging , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Knee/anatomy & histology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Spin Labels , Adult , Hip/surgery , Hip Prosthesis , Humans , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Phantoms, Imaging , Radiography , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Titanium/chemistry
18.
Magn Reson Med ; 73(2): 692-6, 2015 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24639003

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To describe a new framework for interleaving scans and demonstrate its usefulness for image-based respiratory motion correction in whole heart coronary MR angiography (CMRA). METHODS: Scan interleaving using the proposed approach was achieved by switching between separately defined, independent scans at arbitrary time points during their execution, using a generic function call. The scan interleaving framework was used to perform scan interleaving for image-based respiratory navigation of CMRA with spiral, radial, and Cartesian echo-planar imaging (EPI) navigator k-space trajectories. Eight healthy volunteers were scanned. RESULTS: Improved coronary vessel sharpness and visual scores were obtained using spiral and Cartesian EPI navigators compared with radial navigators. CONCLUSION: The usefulness of the proposed scan interleaving framework was demonstrated for image-based respiratory motion correction. It facilitated more direct comparisons of image navigator acquisitions with different k-space trajectories. Furthermore, we could demonstrate that spiral and Cartesian EPI navigators may be particularly suitable for image-based motion correction, as they provide improved motion correction and high navigator apparent signal-to-noise ratio while spending very little magnetization, thereby minimizing saturation effects.


Subject(s)
Artifacts , Coronary Vessels/anatomy & histology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine/methods , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Respiratory-Gated Imaging Techniques/methods , Adult , Algorithms , Coronary Angiography/methods , Humans , Image Enhancement/methods , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Motion , Pattern Recognition, Automated/methods , Reproducibility of Results , Respiratory Mechanics , Sensitivity and Specificity
19.
Magn Reson Med ; 69(2): 486-94, 2013 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22529009

ABSTRACT

Respiratory motion remains the major impediment in a substantial amount of patients undergoing coronary magnetic resonance angiography. Motion correction in coronary magnetic resonance angiography is typically performed with a diaphragmatic 1D navigator (1Dnav) assuming a constant linear relationship between diaphragmatic and cardiac respiratory motion. In this work, a novel 2D navigator (2Dnav) is proposed, which prospectively corrects for translational motion in foot-head and left-right direction. First, 1Dnav- and 2Dnav-based motion correction are compared in 2D real time imaging experiments, by evaluating the residual respiratory motion in 10 healthy subjects as well as in a moving vessel phantom. Subsequently, 1Dnav and 2Dnav corrected high-resolution 3D coronary MR angiograms were acquired, and both objective and subjective image quality were assessed. For a gating window of 10 mm, 1Dnav and 2Dnav performed equally well; however, without any respiratory gating, the 1Dnav had a lower visual score for all coronary arteries compared with 10 mm gating, whereas the 2Dnav without gating performed similar to 1Dnav with 10 mm gating.


Subject(s)
Artifacts , Coronary Angiography/methods , Image Enhancement/methods , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Magnetic Resonance Angiography/methods , Respiratory Mechanics , Respiratory-Gated Imaging Techniques/methods , Adult , Algorithms , Female , Humans , Male , Movement , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
20.
Magn Reson Med ; 68(1): 205-13, 2012 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22183798

ABSTRACT

Cardiovascular diseases, including arrhythmias and heart failure, are commonly treated with percutaneous procedures guided by X-ray fluoroscopy. The visualization of the targeted structures can be enhanced using preacquired respiratory-resolved anatomic data (dynamic roadmap), which is displayed as an overlay onto X-ray fluoroscopy images. This article demonstrates how dynamic roadmaps using an affine motion model can be obtained from one respiratory-resolved three-dimensional whole-heart acquisition using the previously introduced Radial Phase Encoding-Phase Ordering with Automatic Window Selection method. Respiratory motion in different regions of the heart was analyzed in 10 volunteers, and it was shown that the use of dynamic roadmaps can reduce misalignment errors from more than 10 down to less than 1.5 mm. Furthermore, the results suggest that reliable motion information can be obtained from highly undersampled images due to the advantageous undersampling properties of the radial phase encoding trajectory. Finally, results of a three-dimensional dynamic roadmap obtained from a patient before catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation treatment are presented.


Subject(s)
Atrial Fibrillation/pathology , Atrial Fibrillation/surgery , Catheter Ablation/methods , Image Enhancement/methods , Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Interventional/methods , Respiratory-Gated Imaging Techniques/methods , Surgery, Computer-Assisted/methods , Algorithms , Humans , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Pattern Recognition, Automated/methods , Prospective Studies , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...