scholarly journals Dark blood cardiovascular magnetic resonance of the heart, great vessels, and lungs using electrocardiographic-gated three-dimensional unbalanced steady-state free precession

2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert R. Edelman ◽  
Nondas Leloudas ◽  
Jianing Pang ◽  
Ioannis Koktzoglou

Abstract Background Recently, we reported a novel neuroimaging technique, unbalanced T1 Relaxation-Enhanced Steady-State (uT1RESS), which uses a tailored 3D unbalanced steady-state free precession (3D uSSFP) acquisition to suppress the blood pool signal while minimizing bulk motion sensitivity. In the present work, we hypothesized that 3D uSSFP might also be useful for dark blood imaging of the chest. To test the feasibility of this approach, we performed a pilot study in healthy subjects and patients undergoing cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR). Main body The study was approved by the hospital institutional review board. Thirty-one adult subjects were imaged at 1.5 T, including 5 healthy adult subjects and 26 patients (44 to 86 years, 10 female) undergoing a clinically indicated CMR. Breath-holding was used in 29 subjects and navigator gating in 2 subjects. For breath-hold acquisitions, the 3D uSSFP pulse sequence used a high sampling bandwidth, asymmetric readout, and single-shot along the phase-encoding direction, while 3 shots were acquired for navigator-gated scans. To minimize signal dephasing from bulk motion, electrocardiographic (ECG) gating was used to synchronize the data acquisition to the diastolic phase of the cardiac cycle. To further reduce motion sensitivity, the moment of the dephasing gradient was set to one-fifth of the moment of the readout gradient. Image quality using 3D uSSFP was good-to-excellent in all subjects. The blood pool signal in the thoracic aorta was uniformly suppressed with sharp delineation of the aortic wall including two cases of ascending aortic aneurysm and two cases of aortic dissection. Compared with variable flip angle 3D turbo spin-echo, 3D uSSFP showed improved aortic wall sharpness. It was also more efficient, permitting the acquisition of 24 slices in each breath-hold versus 16 slices with 3D turbo spin-echo and a single slice with dual inversion 2D turbo spin-echo. In addition, lung and mediastinal lesions appeared highly conspicuous compared with the low blood pool signals within the heart and blood vessels. In two subjects, navigator-gated 3D uSSFP provided excellent delineation of cardiac morphology in double oblique multiplanar reformations. Conclusion In this pilot study, we have demonstrated the feasibility of using ECG-gated 3D uSSFP for dark blood imaging of the heart, great vessels, and lungs. Further study will be required to fully optimize the technique and to assess clinical utility.

2020 ◽  
pp. 028418512092456
Author(s):  
Jingjing Liu ◽  
Hang Jin ◽  
Yinyin Chen ◽  
Caixia Fu ◽  
Caizhong Chen ◽  
...  

Background Cardiac magnetic resonance (MR) has become an essential diagnostic imaging modality in cardiovascular disease. However, the insufficient image quality of traditional breath-hold (BH) T2-weighted (T2W) imaging may compromise its diagnostic accuracy. Purpose To assess the efficacy of the BLADE technique to reduce motion artifacts and improve the image quality. Material and Methods Free-breathing TSE-T2W imaging sequence with cartesian and BLADE k-space trajectory were acquired in 20 patients. Thirty patients underwent conventional BH turbo spin-echo (TSE) T2W imaging and free-breathing BLADE T2W (FB BLADE-T2W) imaging. Twenty-one patients who had a signal loss of myocardium in BH short-axis T2W turbo inversion recovery (TSE-T2W-TIR) were scanned using free-breathing BLADE T2W turbo inversion recovery (BLADE TSE-T2W-TIR). The overall image quality, blood nulling, and visualization of the heart were scored on a 5-point Likert scale. The signal loss of myocardium, incomplete fat suppression near the myocardium, and the streaking or ghosting artifacts were noted in T2W-TIR sequences additionally. Results The overall imaging quality, blood nulling, and the visualization of heart structure of FB BLADE-T2W imaging sequence were significantly better than those of FB T2W imaging with Cartesian k-space trajectory and BH TSE-T2W imaging sequence ( P<0.01). The FB BLADE TSE-T2W-TIR reduces the myocardium signal dropout ( P<0.05), incomplete fat suppression near myocardium ( P<0.05), and the streaking and ghosting artifacts ( P<0.05) in comparison with the BH TSE-T2W-TIR. Conclusions FB BLADE T2W imaging provides improved myocardial visibility, less motion sensitivity, and better image quality. It may be applied in patients who have poor breath-holding capability.


1999 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 731
Author(s):  
Dal Mo Yang ◽  
Myung Hwan Yoon ◽  
Hak Soo Kim ◽  
Hyung Sik Kim ◽  
Hyug Chung Kim ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (6) ◽  
pp. 1498-1508 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chenxi Hu ◽  
Steffen Huber ◽  
Syed R. Latif ◽  
Guido Santacana-Laffitte ◽  
Hamid R. Mojibian ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.-G. Lee ◽  
Y. K. Jeong ◽  
J. C. Kim ◽  
E. M. Kang ◽  
P. N. Kim ◽  
...  

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