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Simple motion correction strategy reduces respiratory-induced motion artifacts for k-t accelerated and compressed-sensing cardiovascular magnetic resonance perfusion imaging
by
Weller, Daniel S.
, Zhou, Ruixi
, Salerno, Michael
, Huang, Wei
, Chen, Xiao
, Kramer, Christopher M.
, Yang, Yang
, Kozerke, Sebastian
in
Angiology
/ Blood Flow Velocity
/ Breath Holding
/ Cardiology
/ CMR perfusion
/ Coronary Artery Disease - diagnostic imaging
/ Coronary Artery Disease - physiopathology
/ Coronary Circulation
/ Coronary heart disease
/ Diagnosis
/ Humans
/ Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted - methods
/ Image reconstruction
/ Imaging
/ K-t acceleration
/ Magnetic resonance imaging
/ Magnetic Resonance Imaging - instrumentation
/ Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Motion compensation
/ Myocardial perfusion
/ Myocardial Perfusion Imaging - instrumentation
/ Myocardial Perfusion Imaging - methods
/ Phantoms, Imaging
/ Predictive Value of Tests
/ Prognosis
/ Radiology
/ Reproducibility of Results
/ Respiration
2018
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Simple motion correction strategy reduces respiratory-induced motion artifacts for k-t accelerated and compressed-sensing cardiovascular magnetic resonance perfusion imaging
by
Weller, Daniel S.
, Zhou, Ruixi
, Salerno, Michael
, Huang, Wei
, Chen, Xiao
, Kramer, Christopher M.
, Yang, Yang
, Kozerke, Sebastian
in
Angiology
/ Blood Flow Velocity
/ Breath Holding
/ Cardiology
/ CMR perfusion
/ Coronary Artery Disease - diagnostic imaging
/ Coronary Artery Disease - physiopathology
/ Coronary Circulation
/ Coronary heart disease
/ Diagnosis
/ Humans
/ Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted - methods
/ Image reconstruction
/ Imaging
/ K-t acceleration
/ Magnetic resonance imaging
/ Magnetic Resonance Imaging - instrumentation
/ Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Motion compensation
/ Myocardial perfusion
/ Myocardial Perfusion Imaging - instrumentation
/ Myocardial Perfusion Imaging - methods
/ Phantoms, Imaging
/ Predictive Value of Tests
/ Prognosis
/ Radiology
/ Reproducibility of Results
/ Respiration
2018
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Simple motion correction strategy reduces respiratory-induced motion artifacts for k-t accelerated and compressed-sensing cardiovascular magnetic resonance perfusion imaging
by
Weller, Daniel S.
, Zhou, Ruixi
, Salerno, Michael
, Huang, Wei
, Chen, Xiao
, Kramer, Christopher M.
, Yang, Yang
, Kozerke, Sebastian
in
Angiology
/ Blood Flow Velocity
/ Breath Holding
/ Cardiology
/ CMR perfusion
/ Coronary Artery Disease - diagnostic imaging
/ Coronary Artery Disease - physiopathology
/ Coronary Circulation
/ Coronary heart disease
/ Diagnosis
/ Humans
/ Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted - methods
/ Image reconstruction
/ Imaging
/ K-t acceleration
/ Magnetic resonance imaging
/ Magnetic Resonance Imaging - instrumentation
/ Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Motion compensation
/ Myocardial perfusion
/ Myocardial Perfusion Imaging - instrumentation
/ Myocardial Perfusion Imaging - methods
/ Phantoms, Imaging
/ Predictive Value of Tests
/ Prognosis
/ Radiology
/ Reproducibility of Results
/ Respiration
2018
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Simple motion correction strategy reduces respiratory-induced motion artifacts for k-t accelerated and compressed-sensing cardiovascular magnetic resonance perfusion imaging
Journal Article
Simple motion correction strategy reduces respiratory-induced motion artifacts for k-t accelerated and compressed-sensing cardiovascular magnetic resonance perfusion imaging
2018
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Overview
Background
Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) stress perfusion imaging provides important diagnostic and prognostic information in coronary artery disease (CAD). Current clinical sequences have limited temporal and/or spatial resolution, and incomplete heart coverage. Techniques such as k-t principal component analysis (PCA) or k-t sparcity and low rank structure (SLR), which rely on the high degree of spatiotemporal correlation in first-pass perfusion data, can significantly accelerate image acquisition mitigating these problems. However, in the presence of respiratory motion, these techniques can suffer from significant degradation of image quality. A number of techniques based on non-rigid registration have been developed. However, to first approximation, breathing motion predominantly results in rigid motion of the heart. To this end, a simple robust motion correction strategy is proposed for k-t accelerated and compressed sensing (CS) perfusion imaging.
Methods
A simple respiratory motion compensation (MC) strategy for k-t accelerated and compressed-sensing CMR perfusion imaging to selectively correct respiratory motion of the heart was implemented based on linear k-space phase shifts derived from rigid motion registration of a region-of-interest (ROI) encompassing the heart. A variable density Poisson disk acquisition strategy was used to minimize coherent aliasing in the presence of respiratory motion, and images were reconstructed using k-t PCA and k-t SLR with or without motion correction. The strategy was evaluated in a CMR-extended cardiac torso digital (XCAT) phantom and in prospectively acquired first-pass perfusion studies in 12 subjects undergoing clinically ordered CMR studies. Phantom studies were assessed using the Structural Similarity Index (SSIM) and Root Mean Square Error (RMSE). In patient studies, image quality was scored in a blinded fashion by two experienced cardiologists.
Results
In the phantom experiments, images reconstructed with the MC strategy had higher SSIM (
p
< 0.01) and lower RMSE (
p
< 0.01) in the presence of respiratory motion. For patient studies, the MC strategy improved k-t PCA and k-t SLR reconstruction image quality (
p
< 0.01). The performance of k-t SLR without motion correction demonstrated improved image quality as compared to k-t PCA in the setting of respiratory motion (
p
< 0.01), while with motion correction there is a trend of better performance in k-t SLR as compared with motion corrected k-t PCA.
Conclusions
Our simple and robust rigid motion compensation strategy greatly reduces motion artifacts and improves image quality for standard k-t PCA and k-t SLR techniques in setting of respiratory motion due to imperfect breath-holding.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Elsevier
Subject
/ Coronary Artery Disease - diagnostic imaging
/ Coronary Artery Disease - physiopathology
/ Humans
/ Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted - methods
/ Imaging
/ Magnetic Resonance Imaging - instrumentation
/ Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods
/ Medicine
/ Myocardial Perfusion Imaging - instrumentation
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