Respiratory motion-corrected T1 mapping of the abdomen.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_6E7C6B57060A
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Respiratory motion-corrected T1 mapping of the abdomen.
Journal
Magma
ISSN
1352-8661 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0968-5243
Publication state
Published
Issued date
08/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
37
Number
4
Pages
637-649
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate an approach for motion-corrected T1 mapping of the abdomen that allows for free breathing data acquisition with 100% scan efficiency.
Data were acquired using a continuous golden radial trajectory and multiple inversion pulses. For the correction of respiratory motion, motion estimation based on a surrogate was performed from the same data used for T1 mapping. Image-based self-navigation allowed for binning and reconstruction of respiratory-resolved images, which were used for the estimation of respiratory motion fields. Finally, motion-corrected T1 maps were calculated from the data applying the estimated motion fields. The method was evaluated in five healthy volunteers. For the assessment of the image-based navigator, we compared it to a simultaneously acquired ultrawide band radar signal. Motion-corrected T1 maps were evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively for different scan times.
For all volunteers, the motion-corrected T1 maps showed fewer motion artifacts in the liver as well as sharper kidney structures and blood vessels compared to uncorrected T1 maps. Moreover, the relative error to the reference breathhold T1 maps could be reduced from up to 25% for the uncorrected T1 maps to below 10% for the motion-corrected maps for the average value of a region of interest, while the scan time could be reduced to 6-8 s.
The proposed approach allows for respiratory motion-corrected T1 mapping in the abdomen and ensures accurate T1 maps without the need for any breathholds.
Data were acquired using a continuous golden radial trajectory and multiple inversion pulses. For the correction of respiratory motion, motion estimation based on a surrogate was performed from the same data used for T1 mapping. Image-based self-navigation allowed for binning and reconstruction of respiratory-resolved images, which were used for the estimation of respiratory motion fields. Finally, motion-corrected T1 maps were calculated from the data applying the estimated motion fields. The method was evaluated in five healthy volunteers. For the assessment of the image-based navigator, we compared it to a simultaneously acquired ultrawide band radar signal. Motion-corrected T1 maps were evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively for different scan times.
For all volunteers, the motion-corrected T1 maps showed fewer motion artifacts in the liver as well as sharper kidney structures and blood vessels compared to uncorrected T1 maps. Moreover, the relative error to the reference breathhold T1 maps could be reduced from up to 25% for the uncorrected T1 maps to below 10% for the motion-corrected maps for the average value of a region of interest, while the scan time could be reduced to 6-8 s.
The proposed approach allows for respiratory motion-corrected T1 mapping in the abdomen and ensures accurate T1 maps without the need for any breathholds.
Keywords
Humans, Abdomen/diagnostic imaging, Respiration, Motion, Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods, Artifacts, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods, Healthy Volunteers, Adult, Algorithms, Liver/diagnostic imaging, Movement/physiology, Male, Female, Kidney/diagnostic imaging, Reproducibility of Results, Abdominal T1 mapping, Image-based navigator, Respiratory motion correction
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
19/08/2024 9:31
Last modification date
01/10/2024 6:07