Venc Design and Velocity Estimation for Phase Contrast MRI.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging
; 41(12): 3712-3724, 2022 12.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-35862337
In phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging (PC-MRI), spin velocity contributes to the phase measured at each voxel. Therefore, estimating velocity from potentially wrapped phase measurements is the task of solving a system of noisy congruence equations. We propose Phase Recovery from Multiple Wrapped Measurements (PRoM) as a fast, approximate maximum likelihood estimator of velocity from multi-coil data with possible amplitude attenuation due to dephasing. The estimator can recover the fullest possible extent of unambiguous velocities, which can greatly exceed twice the highest venc. The estimator uses all pairwise phase differences and the inherent correlations among them to minimize the estimation error. Correlations are directly estimated from multi-coil data without requiring knowledge of coil sensitivity maps, dephasing factors, or the actual per-voxel signal-to-noise ratio. Derivation of the estimator yields explicit probabilities of unwrapping errors and the probability distribution for the velocity estimate; this, in turn, allows for optimized design of the phase-encoded acquisition. These probabilities are also incorporated into spatial post-processing to further mitigate wrapping errors. Simulation, phantom, and in vivo results for three-point PC-MRI acquisitions validate the benefits of reduced estimation error, increased recovered velocity range, optimized acquisition, and fast computation. A phantom study at 1.5T demonstrates 48.5% decrease in root mean squared error using PRoM with post-processing versus a conventional "dual-venc" technique. Simulation and 3T in vivo results likewise demonstrate the proposed benefits.
Texto completo:
1
Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Algoritmos
/
Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética
Idioma:
En
Revista:
IEEE Trans Med Imaging
Ano de publicação:
2022
Tipo de documento:
Article