scholarly journals Inter-breath-hold Registration for the Production of High Resolution Cardiac MR Volumes

Author(s):  
Nicholas M. I. Noble ◽  
Redha Boubertakh ◽  
Reza S. Razavi ◽  
Derek L. G. Hill
2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 311-317
Author(s):  
Kamlesh B. Patel ◽  
Cihat Eldeniz ◽  
Gary B. Skolnick ◽  
Udayabhanu Jammalamadaka ◽  
Paul K. Commean ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVEThere is an unmet need to perform imaging in young children and obtain CT-equivalent cranial bone images without subjecting the patients to radiation. In this study, the authors propose using a high-resolution fast low-angle shot golden-angle 3D stack-of-stars radial volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination (GA-VIBE) MRI sequence that is intrinsically robust to motion and has enhanced bone versus soft-tissue contrast.METHODSPatients younger than 11 years of age, who underwent clinical head CT scanning for craniosynostosis or other cranial malformations, were eligible for the study. 3D reconstructed images created from the GA-VIBE MRI sequence and the gold-standard CT scan were randomized and presented to 3 blinded reviewers. For all image sets, each reviewer noted the presence or absence of the 6 primary cranial sutures and recorded on 5-point Likert scales whether they recommended a second scan be performed.RESULTSEleven patients (median age 1.8 years) underwent MRI after clinical head CT scanning was performed. Five of the 11 patients were sedated. Three clinicians reviewed the images, and there were no cases, either with CT scans or MR images, in which a reviewer agreed a repeat scan was required for diagnosis or surgical planning. The reviewers reported clear imaging of the regions of interest on 99% of the CT reviews and 96% of the MRI reviews. With CT as the standard, the sensitivity and specificity of the GA-VIBE MRI sequence to detect suture closure were 97% and 96%, respectively (n = 198 sutures read).CONCLUSIONSThe 3D reconstructed images using the GA-VIBE sequence in comparison to the CT scans created clinically acceptable cranial images capable of detecting cranial sutures. Future directions include reducing the scan time, improving motion correction, and automating postprocessing for clinical utility.


Author(s):  
Liam Cattell ◽  
Craig H. Meyer ◽  
Frederick H. Epstein ◽  
Gustavo K. Rohde
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
M Varela ◽  
M Anjari ◽  
T Correia ◽  
R Zakeri ◽  
E Alskaf ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction It is increasingly evident that atrial function is an important marker of cardiovascular health. Impaired global left atrial strain has been associated with risk of thromboembolic events, atrial fibrillation and heart failure. When performed at high spatial resolution, CINE MRI allows the estimation of regional atrial strains, which may facilitate earlier identification of atrial disease and improved (non-contrast) characterisation of atrial fibrosis. Nevertheless, to date, high resolution regional atrial strains has not been assessed using CINE MRI. Purpose We introduce a novel rapid 2.2-mm isotropic atrial CINE MRI protocol used to image healthy subjects and patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD). We additionally present a dedicated image analysis pipeline to estimate regional 3D atrial strains from these images. Methods We imaged 10 healthy subjects (5 female, 24–36 years old) and 6 patients referred for cardiac MRI due to known or suspected CVD (2 female, 25–80 years old). All subjects were scanned in a 1.5T Philips Ingenia MRI scanner in a single breath-hold (<25 s), using a short-axis 3D bSSFP protocol (flip angle: 60°, TE/TR: 1.6/3.3 ms) with retrospective cardiac gating, SENSE = 2.3 (along both phase encode directions), typical FOV: 400 x 270 x 70 mm3, isotropic acquisition resolution of 2.2 mm3. Images were reconstructed to 20 cardiac phases with 55% view sharing. The left atrium (LA) was manually segmented in atrial diastole. We tracked the position of evenly spaced points along the LA contour across all phases of the cardiac cycle using the Medical Image Tracking Toolbox. This was used to create a series of deforming smooth triangular meshes, from which Lagrange strain tensors were estimated. Results Figs a-c show 3 orthogonal views of the proposed high-resolution atrial CINE MRI scans for a representative CVD patient, with the LA segmentation overlaid in red. Representative LA principal strain directions (as arrows) with the colour indicating the amount of strain observed along this direction are shown in Fig d for active atrial contraction (posterior view). The calculated strain directions varied smoothly in space and time, as expected, and were largest in amplitude in the regions closest to the mitral valve. Overall, principal strains were larger in healthy subjects (AC strains: 0.12±0.06) than in the CVD cohort (AC strains: 0.04±0.01). This difference was statistically significant during AC (p-value: 0.02), but not during atrial diastole (p-value: 0.06). Conclusions We present a novel high-resolution CINE-MRI protocol for estimating regional atrial strains in 3D, with pilot data from 10 healthy subjects and 6 cardiovascular patients. Future studies will compare regions of abnormal atrial strain with fibrosis identified in late gadolinium enhanced MRI to assess whether regional strains can provide a better characterisation of atrial tissue and improved stratification of patients at risk. Figure 1 Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding source: Foundation. Main funding source(s): British Heart Foundation, EPSRC/Wellcome Trust Centre for Medical Engineering


2009 ◽  
Vol 72 (2) ◽  
pp. 300-305 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akihiko Tabuchi ◽  
Toshizo Katsuda ◽  
Rumi Gotanda ◽  
Tatsuhiro Gotanda ◽  
Masahiko Mitani ◽  
...  

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