Thomas E Olausson, Maarten L Terpstra, Niek R F Huttinga, Casper Beijst, Niels Blanken, Dominika Suchá, Teresa Correia, Birgitta K Velthuis, Cornelis A T van den Berg, Alessandro Sbrizzi
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: First-pass myocardial perfusion involves several types of dynamics, including cardiac motion, respiratory motion, bulk motion and contrast agent inflow. To accurately quantify the initial inflow of the contrast agent, high spatiotemporal resolution MR imaging must be obtained. To achieve this, we present a novel approach, named CMR-MOTUS, for the reconstruction of time-resolved free-running first-pass myocardial perfusion by jointly estimating high-quality motion fields and contrast-varying images.
Materials and methods: We propose CMR-MOTUS, which extends the MR-MOTUS framework by integrating a contrast-varying reference image with a low-rank plus sparse decomposition to capture additional dynamics such as blood flow and contrast agent inflow. This joint reconstruction framework alternates between solving for time-dependent image contrast changes and motion fields, eliminating the need for a pre-acquisition motion-static reference image. The method was tested on simulations and in-vivo datasets.
Results: In simulations, CMR-MOTUS showed improved image similarity and motion field accuracy compared to state-of-the-art methods. In in-vivo tests, the methods effectively captured cardiac and respiratory motion dynamics, resulting in cine images with sharper features than state-of-the-art.
Discussion: CMR-MOTUS presents significant advantages by modelling motion and contrast dynamics in the reconstruction of first-pass myocardial perfusion. The framework enables a data-efficient free-running workflow since the entire acquisition is correlated with high-quality motion fields. This approach has the potential to enhance the diagnostic value of cardiac MRI but needs further clinical validations.
期刊介绍:
MAGMA is a multidisciplinary international journal devoted to the publication of articles on all aspects of magnetic resonance techniques and their applications in medicine and biology. MAGMA currently publishes research papers, reviews, letters to the editor, and commentaries, six times a year. The subject areas covered by MAGMA include:
advances in materials, hardware and software in magnetic resonance technology,
new developments and results in research and practical applications of magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy related to biology and medicine,
study of animal models and intact cells using magnetic resonance,
reports of clinical trials on humans and clinical validation of magnetic resonance protocols.