scholarly journals Free-breathing, motion-corrected, highly efficient whole heart T2 mapping at 3T with hybrid radial-cartesian trajectory

2015 ◽  
Vol 75 (1) ◽  
pp. 126-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hsin-Jung Yang ◽  
Behzad Sharif ◽  
Jianing Pang ◽  
Avinash Kali ◽  
Xiaoming Bi ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Vol 17 (S1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hsin-Jung Yang ◽  
Jianing Pang ◽  
Behzad Sharif ◽  
Avinash Kali ◽  
Xiaoming Bi ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karolina Dorniak ◽  
Lorenzo Di Sopra ◽  
Agnieszka Sabisz ◽  
Anna Glinska ◽  
Christopher W. Roy ◽  
...  

Background: T2 mapping is a magnetic resonance imaging technique that can be used to detect myocardial edema and inflammation. However, the focal nature of myocardial inflammation may render conventional 2D approaches suboptimal and make whole-heart isotropic 3D mapping desirable. While self-navigated 3D radial T2 mapping has been demonstrated to work well at a magnetic field strength of 3T, it results in too noisy maps at 1.5T. We therefore implemented a novel respiratory motion-resolved compressed-sensing reconstruction in order to improve the 3D T2 mapping precision and accuracy at 1.5T, and tested this in a heterogeneous patient cohort.Materials and Methods: Nine healthy volunteers and 25 consecutive patients with suspected acute non-ischemic myocardial injury (sarcoidosis, n = 19; systemic sclerosis, n = 2; acute graft rejection, n = 2, and myocarditis, n = 2) were included. The free-breathing T2 maps were acquired as three ECG-triggered T2-prepared 3D radial volumes. A respiratory motion-resolved reconstruction was followed by image registration of the respiratory states and pixel-wise T2 mapping. The resulting 3D maps were compared to routine 2D T2 maps. The T2 values of segments with and without late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) were compared in patients.Results: In the healthy volunteers, the myocardial T2 values obtained with the 2D and 3D techniques were similar (45.8 ± 1.8 vs. 46.8 ± 2.9 ms, respectively; P = 0.33). Conversely, in patients, T2 values did differ between 2D (46.7 ± 3.6 ms) and 3D techniques (50.1 ± 4.2 ms, P = 0.004). Moreover, with the 2D technique, T2 values of the LGE-positive segments were similar to those of the LGE-negative segments (T2LGE−= 46.2 ± 3.7 vs. T2LGE+ = 47.6 ± 4.1 ms; P = 0.49), whereas the 3D technique did show a significant difference (T2LGE− = 49.3 ± 6.7 vs. T2LGE+ = 52.6 ± 8.7 ms, P = 0.006).Conclusion: Respiratory motion-registered 3D radial imaging at 1.5T led to accurate isotropic 3D whole-heart T2 maps, both in the healthy volunteers and in a small patient cohort with suspected non-ischemic myocardial injury. Significantly higher T2 values were found in patients as compared to controls in 3D but not in 2D, suggestive of the technique's potential to increase the sensitivity of CMR at earlier stages of disease. Further study will be needed to demonstrate its accuracy.


2019 ◽  
Vol 83 (5) ◽  
pp. 1673-1687 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giorgia Milotta ◽  
Giulia Ginami ◽  
Aurelien Bustin ◽  
Radhouene Neji ◽  
Claudia Prieto ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert E. Stroud ◽  
Davide Piccini ◽  
U. Joseph Schoepf ◽  
John Heerfordt ◽  
Jérôme Yerly ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ning Jin ◽  
Juliana Serafim da Silveira ◽  
Marie-Pierre Jolly ◽  
David N. Firmin ◽  
George Mathew ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Teresa Correia ◽  
Giulia Ginami ◽  
Imran Rashid ◽  
Giovanna Nordio ◽  
Reza Hajhosseiny ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The free-breathing 3D whole-heart T2-prepared Bright-blood and black-blOOd phase SensiTive inversion recovery (BOOST) cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) sequence was recently proposed for simultaneous bright-blood coronary CMR angiography and black-blood late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) imaging. This sequence enables simultaneous visualization of cardiac anatomy, coronary arteries and fibrosis. However, high-resolution (< 1.4 × 1.4 × 1.4 mm3) fully-sampled BOOST requires long acquisition times of ~ 20 min. Methods In this work, we propose to extend a highly efficient respiratory-resolved motion-corrected reconstruction framework (XD-ORCCA) to T2-prepared BOOST to enable high-resolution 3D whole-heart coronary CMR angiography and black-blood LGE in a clinically feasible scan time. Twelve healthy subjects were imaged without contrast injection (pre-contrast BOOST) and 10 patients with suspected cardiovascular disease were imaged after contrast injection (post-contrast BOOST). A quantitative analysis software was used to compare accelerated pre-contrast BOOST against the fully-sampled counterpart (vessel sharpness and length of the left and right coronary arteries). Moreover, three cardiologists performed diagnostic image quality scoring for clinical 2D LGE and both bright- and black-blood 3D BOOST imaging using a 4-point scale (1–4, non-diagnostic–fully diagnostic). A two one-sided test of equivalence (TOST) was performed to compare the pre-contrast BOOST images. Nonparametric TOST was performed to compare post-contrast BOOST image quality scores. Results The proposed method produces images from 3.8 × accelerated non-contrast-enhanced BOOST acquisitions with comparable vessel length and sharpness to those obtained from fully- sampled scans in healthy subjects. Moreover, in terms of visual grading, the 3D BOOST LGE datasets (median 4) and the clinical 2D counterpart (median 3.5) were found to be statistically equivalent (p < 0.05). In addition, bright-blood BOOST images allowed for visualization of the proximal and middle left anterior descending and right coronary sections with high diagnostic quality (mean score > 3.5). Conclusions The proposed framework provides high‐resolution 3D whole-heart BOOST images from a single free-breathing acquisition in ~ 7 min.


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