Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 15 de 15
Filtrar
1.
Magn Reson Med ; 87(2): 718-732, 2022 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34611923

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: In this work, we integrated the pilot tone (PT) navigation system into a reconstruction framework for respiratory and cardiac motion-resolved 5D flow. We tested the hypotheses that PT would provide equivalent respiratory curves, cardiac triggers, and corresponding flow measurements to a previously established self-gating (SG) technique while being independent from changes to the acquisition parameters. METHODS: Fifteen volunteers and 9 patients were scanned with a free-running 5D flow sequence, with PT integrated. Respiratory curves and cardiac triggers from PT and SG were compared across all subjects. Flow measurements from 5D flow reconstructions using both PT and SG were compared to each other and to a reference electrocardiogram-gated and respiratory triggered 4D flow acquisition. Radial trajectories with variable readouts per interleave were also tested in 1 subject to compare cardiac trigger quality between PT and SG. RESULTS: The correlation between PT and SG respiratory curves were 0.95 ± 0.06 for volunteers and 0.95 ± 0.04 for patients. Heartbeat duration measurements in volunteers and patients showed a bias to electrocardiogram measurements of, respectively, 0.16 ± 64.94 ms and 0.01 ± 39.29 ms for PT versus electrocardiogram and of 0.24 ± 63.68 ms and 0.09 ± 32.79 ms for SG versus electrocardiogram. No significant differences were reported for the flow measurements between 5D flow PT and from 5D flow SG. A decrease in the cardiac triggering quality of SG was observed for increasing readouts per interleave, whereas PT quality remained constant. CONCLUSION: PT has been successfully integrated in 5D flow MRI and has shown equivalent results to the previously described 5D flow SG technique, while being completely acquisition-independent.


Asunto(s)
Corazón , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Electrocardiografía , Corazón/diagnóstico por imagen , Humanos , Movimiento (Física) , Respiración , Frecuencia Respiratoria
2.
J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ; 24(1): 39, 2022 06 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35754040

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Coronary cardiovascular magnetic resonance angiography (CCMRA) of congenital heart disease (CHD) in pediatric patients requires accurate planning, adequate sequence parameter adjustments, lengthy scanning sessions, and significant involvement from highly trained personnel. Anesthesia and intubation are commonplace to minimize movements and control respiration in younger subjects. To address the above concerns and provide a single-click imaging solution, we applied our free-running framework for fully self-gated (SG) free-breathing 5D whole-heart CCMRA to CHD patients after ferumoxytol injection. We tested the hypothesis that spatial and motion resolution suffice to visualize coronary artery ostia in a cohort of CHD subjects, both for intubated and free-breathing acquisitions. METHODS: In 18 pediatric CHD patients, non-electrocardiogram (ECG) triggered 5D free-running gradient echo CCMRA with whole-heart 1 mm3 isotropic spatial resolution was performed in seven minutes on a 1.5T CMR scanner. Eleven patients were anesthetized and intubated, while seven were breathing freely without anesthesia. All patients were slowly injected with ferumoxytol (4 mg/kg) over 15 minutes. Cardiac and respiratory motion-resolved 5D images were reconstructed with a fully SG approach. To evaluate the performance of motion resolution, visibility of coronary artery origins was assessed. Intubated and free-breathing patient sub-groups were compared for image quality using coronary artery length and conspicuity as well as lung-liver interface sharpness. RESULTS: Data collection using the free-running framework was successful in all patients in less than 8 min; scan planning was very simple without the need for parameter adjustments, while no ECG lead placement and triggering was required. From the resulting SG 5D motion-resolved reconstructed images, coronary artery origins could be retrospectively extracted in 90% of the cases. These general findings applied to both intubated and free-breathing pediatric patients (no difference in terms of lung-liver interface sharpness), while image quality and coronary conspicuity between both cohorts was very similar. CONCLUSIONS: A simple-to-use push-button framework for 5D whole-heart CCMRA was successfully employed in pediatric CHD patients with ferumoxytol injection. This approach, working without any external gating and for a wide range of heart rates and body sizes provided excellent definition of cardiac anatomy for both intubated and free-breathing patients.


Asunto(s)
Cardiopatías Congénitas , Angiografía por Resonancia Magnética , Niño , Angiografía Coronaria/métodos , Vasos Coronarios/diagnóstico por imagen , Vasos Coronarios/patología , Óxido Ferrosoférrico , Cardiopatías Congénitas/diagnóstico por imagen , Cardiopatías Congénitas/patología , Humanos , Imagenología Tridimensional/métodos , Pulmón , Angiografía por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Valor Predictivo de las Pruebas , Respiración , Estudios Retrospectivos
3.
Magn Reson Med ; 85(6): 3125-3139, 2021 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33400296

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: This study used a 5D flow framework to explore the influence of arrhythmia on thrombogenic hemodynamic parameters in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). METHODS: A fully self-gated, 3D radial, highly accelerated free-running 5D flow sequence with interleaved four-point velocity-encoding was acquired using an in vitro arrhythmic flow phantom and in 25 patients with a history of AF (68 ± 8 y, 6 female). Self-gating signals were used to calculate AF burden, bin data, and tag each k-space line with its RRLength . Data were binned as an RR-resolved dataset with four RR-interval bins (RR1-RR4, short-to-long) for compressed sensing reconstruction. AF burden was calculated as interquartile range of all intrascan RR-intervals divided by median RR-interval, and left atrial (LA) stasis as the percent of the cardiac cycle where the velocity was <0.1 m/s. RESULTS: In vitro results demonstrated successful recovery of RR-binned flow curves using RR-resolved 5D flow compared to a real-time PC reference standard. In vivo, 5D flow was acquired in 8:48 minutes. AF burden was significantly correlated with 5D flow-derived peak (PV) and mean (MV) velocity and stasis (|ρ| = 0.54-0.75, P < .001). Sensitivity analyses determined a threshold for low versus high AF burden at 9.7%. High burden patients had increased LA mean stasis (up to +42%, P < .01), and lower MV and PV (-30%, -40.6%, respectively, P < .01). RR4 deviated furthest from respiratory-resolved reconstruction (end-expiration) with increased mean stasis (7.6% ± 14.0%, P = .10) and decreased PV (-12.7 ± 14.2%, P = .09). CONCLUSIONS: RR-resolved 5D flow can capture temporal and RR-resolved 3D hemodynamics in <10 minutes and offers a novel approach to investigate arrhythmias.


Asunto(s)
Fibrilación Atrial , Fibrilación Atrial/diagnóstico por imagen , Velocidad del Flujo Sanguíneo , Femenino , Atrios Cardíacos/diagnóstico por imagen , Humanos , Interpretación de Imagen Asistida por Computador , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética
4.
Magn Reson Med ; 86(1): 213-229, 2021 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33624348

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Whole-heart MRA techniques typically target predetermined motion states, address cardiac and respiratory dynamics independently, and require either complex planning or computationally demanding reconstructions. In contrast, we developed a fast data-driven reconstruction algorithm with minimal physiological assumptions and compatibility with ungated free-running sequences. THEORY AND METHODS: We propose a similarity-driven multi-dimensional binning algorithm (SIMBA) that clusters continuously acquired k-space data to find a motion-consistent subset for whole-heart MRA reconstruction. Free-running 3D radial data sets from 12 non-contrast-enhanced scans of healthy volunteers and six ferumoxytol-enhanced scans of pediatric cardiac patients were reconstructed with non-motion-suppressed regridding of all the acquired data ("All Data"), with SIMBA, and with a previously published free-running framework (FRF) that uses cardiac and respiratory self-gating and compressed sensing. Images were compared for blood-myocardium sharpness and contrast ratio, visibility of coronary artery ostia, and right coronary artery sharpness. RESULTS: Both the 20-second SIMBA reconstruction and FRF provided significantly higher blood-myocardium sharpness than All Data in both patients and volunteers (P < .05). The SIMBA reconstruction provided significantly sharper blood-myocardium interfaces than FRF in volunteers (P < .001) and higher blood-myocardium contrast ratio than All Data and FRF, both in volunteers and patients (P < .05). Significantly more ostia could be visualized with both SIMBA (31 of 36) and FRF (34 of 36) than with All Data (4 of 36) (P < .001). Inferior right coronary artery sharpness using SIMBA versus FRF was observed (volunteers: SIMBA 36.1 ± 8.1%, FRF 40.4 ± 8.9%; patients: SIMBA 35.9 ± 7.7%, FRF 40.3 ± 6.1%, P = not significant). CONCLUSION: The SIMBA technique enabled a fast, data-driven reconstruction of free-running whole-heart MRA with image quality superior to All Data and similar to the more time-consuming FRF reconstruction.


Asunto(s)
Imagenología Tridimensional , Angiografía por Resonancia Magnética , Algoritmos , Niño , Vasos Coronarios/diagnóstico por imagen , Humanos , Movimiento (Física)
5.
J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ; 23(1): 7, 2021 02 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33557887

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Patients with thoracic aortic dilatation who undergo annual computed tomography angiography (CTA) are subject to repeated radiation and contrast exposure. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of a non-contrast, respiratory motion-resolved whole-heart cardiovascular magnetic resonance angiography (CMRA) technique against reference standard CTA, for the quantitative assessment of cardiovascular anatomy and monitoring of disease progression in patients with thoracic aortic dilatation.  METHODS: Twenty-four patients (68.6 ± 9.8 years) with thoracic aortic dilatation prospectively underwent clinical CTA and research 1.5T CMRA between July 2017 and November 2018. Scans were repeated in 15 patients 1 year later. A prototype free-breathing 3D radial balanced steady-state free-precession whole-heart CMRA sequence was used in combination with compressed sensing-based reconstruction. Area, circumference, and diameter measurements were obtained at seven aortic levels by two experienced and two inexperienced readers. In addition, area and diameter measurements of the cardiac chambers, pulmonary arteries and pulmonary veins were also obtained. Agreement between the two modalities was assessed with intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) analysis, Bland-Altman plots and scatter plots. RESULTS: Area, circumference and diameter measurements on a per-level analysis showed good or excellent agreement between CTA and CMRA (ICCs > 0.84). Means of differences on Bland-Altman plots were: area 0.0 cm2 [- 1.7; 1.6]; circumference 1.0 mm [- 10.0; 12.0], and diameter 0.6 mm [- 2.6; 3.6]. Area and diameter measurements of the left cardiac chambers showed good agreement (ICCs > 0.80), while moderate to good agreement was observed for the right chambers (all ICCs > 0.56). Similar good to excellent inter-modality agreement was shown for the pulmonary arteries and veins (ICC range 0.79-0.93), with the exception of the left lower pulmonary vein (ICC < 0.51). Inter-reader assessment demonstrated mostly good or excellent agreement for both CTA and CMRA measurements on a per-level analysis (ICCs > 0.64). Difference in maximum aortic diameter measurements at baseline vs follow up showed excellent agreement between CMRA and CTA (ICC = 0.91). CONCLUSIONS: The radial whole-heart CMRA technique combined with respiratory motion-resolved reconstruction provides comparable anatomical measurements of the thoracic aorta and cardiac structures as the reference standard CTA. It could potentially be used to diagnose and monitor patients with thoracic aortic dilatation without exposing them to radiation or contrast media.


Asunto(s)
Aorta Torácica/diagnóstico por imagen , Aneurisma de la Aorta Torácica/diagnóstico por imagen , Aortografía , Angiografía por Tomografía Computarizada , Corazón/diagnóstico por imagen , Angiografía por Resonancia Magnética , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Aorta Torácica/patología , Aneurisma de la Aorta Torácica/patología , Dilatación Patológica , Progresión de la Enfermedad , Estudios de Factibilidad , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Valor Predictivo de las Pruebas , Estudios Prospectivos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Factores de Tiempo
6.
Magn Reson Med ; 84(3): 1470-1485, 2020 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32144824

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: To implement, optimize, and characterize lipid-insensitive binomial off-resonant RF excitation (LIBRE) pulses for fat-suppressed fully self-gated free-running 5D cardiac MRI. METHODS: Bloch equation simulations were used to optimize LIBRE parameter settings in non-interrupted bSSFP prior to in vitro validation. Thus, optimized LIBRE pulses were subsequently applied to free-running coronary MRA in 20 human adult subjects, where resulting images were quantitatively compared to those obtained with non-fat-suppressing excitation (SP), conventional 1-2-1 water excitation (WE), and a previously published interrupted free-running (IFR) sequence. SAR and scan times were recorded. Respiratory-and-cardiac-motion-resolved images were reconstructed with XD-GRASP, and contrast ratios, coronary artery detection rate, vessel length, and vessel sharpness were computed. RESULTS: The numerically optimized LIBRE parameters were successfully validated in vitro. In vivo, LIBRE had the lowest SAR and a scan time that was similar to that of WE yet 18% shorter than that of IFR. LIBRE improved blood-fat contrast when compared to SP, WE, and IFR, vessel detection relative to SP and IFR, and vessel sharpness when compared to WE and IFR (for example, for the left main and anterior descending coronary artery, 51.5% ± 10.2% [LIBRE] versus 42.1% ± 6.8% [IFR]). Vessel length measurements remained unchanged for all investigated methods. CONCLUSION: LIBRE enabled fully self-gated non-interrupted free-running 5D bSSFP imaging of the heart at 1.5T with suppressed fat signal. Measures of image quality, vessel conspicuity, and scan time compared favorably to those obtained with the more conventional non-interrupted WE and the previously published IFR, while SAR reduction offers added flexibility.


Asunto(s)
Corazón , Agua , Adulto , Angiografía Coronaria , Vasos Coronarios/diagnóstico por imagen , Humanos , Imagenología Tridimensional , Lípidos , Angiografía por Resonancia Magnética , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética
7.
Magn Reson Med ; 83(1): 45-55, 2020 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31452244

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: To implement, optimize, and test fast interrupted steady-state (FISS) for natively fat-suppressed free-running 5D whole-heart MRI at 1.5 tesla (T) and 3T. METHODS: FISS was implemented for fully self-gated free-running cardiac- and respiratory-motion-resolved radial imaging of the heart at 1.5T and 3T. Numerical simulations and phantom scans were performed to compare fat suppression characteristics and to determine parameter ranges (number of readouts [NR] per FISS module and TR) for effective fat suppression. Subsequently, free-running FISS data were collected in 10 healthy volunteers and images were reconstructed with compressed sensing. All acquisitions were compared with a continuous balanced steady-state free precession version of the same sequence, and both fat suppression and scan times were analyzed. RESULTS: Simulations demonstrate a variable width and location of suppression bands in FISS that were dependent on TR and NR. For a fat suppression bandwidth of 100 Hz and NR ≤ 8, simulations demonstrated that a TR between 2.2 ms and 3.0 ms is required at 1.5T, whereas a range of 3.0 ms to 3.5 ms applies at 3T. Fat signal increases with NR. These findings were corroborated in phantom experiments. In volunteers, fat SNR was significantly decreased using FISS compared with balanced steady-state free precession (P < 0.05) at both field strengths. After protocol optimization, high-resolution (1.1 mm3 ) 5D whole-heart free-running FISS can be performed with effective fat suppression in under 8 min at 1.5T and 3T at a modest scan time increase compared to balanced steady-state free precession. CONCLUSION: An optimal FISS parameter range was determined enabling natively fat-suppressed 5D whole-heart free-running MRI with a single continuous scan at 1.5T and 3T, demonstrating potential for cardiac imaging and noncontrast angiography.


Asunto(s)
Radicales Libres , Corazón/diagnóstico por imagen , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Técnicas de Imagen Sincronizada Respiratorias , Algoritmos , Simulación por Computador , Angiografía Coronaria , Electrocardiografía , Voluntarios Sanos , Humanos , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Modelos Teóricos , Movimiento (Física) , Distribución Normal , Fantasmas de Imagen , Relación Señal-Ruido
8.
Magn Reson Med ; 82(6): 2118-2132, 2019 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31321816

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: To develop a previously reported, electrocardiogram (ECG)-gated, motion-resolved 5D compressed sensing whole-heart sparse MRI methodology into an automated, optimized, and fully self-gated free-running framework in which external gating or triggering devices are no longer needed. METHODS: Cardiac and respiratory self-gating signals were extracted from raw image data acquired in 12 healthy adult volunteers with a non-ECG-triggered 3D radial golden-angle 1.5 T balanced SSFP sequence. To extract cardiac self-gating signals, central k-space coefficient signal analysis (k0 modulation), as well as independent and principal component analyses were performed on selected k-space profiles. The procedure yielding triggers with the smallest deviation from those of the reference ECG was selected for the automated protocol. Thus, optimized cardiac and respiratory self-gating signals were used for binning in a compressed sensing reconstruction pipeline. Coronary vessel length and sharpness of the resultant 5D images were compared with image reconstructions obtained with ECG-gating. RESULTS: Principal component analysis-derived cardiac self-gating triggers yielded a smaller deviation ( 17.4±6.1ms ) from the reference ECG counterparts than k0 modulation ( 26±7.5ms ) or independent component analysis ( 19.8±5.2ms ). Cardiac and respiratory motion-resolved 5D images were successfully reconstructed with the automated and fully self-gated approach. No significant difference was found for coronary vessel length and sharpness between images reconstructed with the fully self-gated and the ECG-gated approach (all P≥.06 ). CONCLUSION: Motion-resolved 5D compressed sensing whole-heart sparse MRI has successfully been developed into an automated, optimized, and fully self-gated free-running framework in which external gating, triggering devices, or navigators are no longer mandatory. The resultant coronary MRA image quality was equivalent to that obtained with conventional ECG-gating.


Asunto(s)
Electrocardiografía , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Procesamiento de Señales Asistido por Computador , Adulto , Técnicas de Imagen Sincronizada Cardíacas , Medios de Contraste/química , Procesamiento Automatizado de Datos , Femenino , Voluntarios Sanos , Corazón , Humanos , Aumento de la Imagen/métodos , Interpretación de Imagen Asistida por Computador/métodos , Masculino , Movimiento (Física) , Análisis de Componente Principal , Estándares de Referencia , Valores de Referencia , Técnicas de Imagen Sincronizada Respiratorias
9.
Front Radiol ; 3: 1144004, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37492382

RESUMEN

Introduction: Deep learning (DL)-based segmentation has gained popularity for routine cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) image analysis and in particular, delineation of left ventricular (LV) borders for LV volume determination. Free-breathing, self-navigated, whole-heart CMR exams provide high-resolution, isotropic coverage of the heart for assessment of cardiac anatomy including LV volume. The combination of whole-heart free-breathing CMR and DL-based LV segmentation has the potential to streamline the acquisition and analysis of clinical CMR exams. The purpose of this study was to compare the performance of a DL-based automatic LV segmentation network trained primarily on computed tomography (CT) images in two whole-heart CMR reconstruction methods: (1) an in-line respiratory motion-corrected (Mcorr) reconstruction and (2) an off-line, compressed sensing-based, multi-volume respiratory motion-resolved (Mres) reconstruction. Given that Mres images were shown to have greater image quality in previous studies than Mcorr images, we hypothesized that the LV volumes segmented from Mres images are closer to the manual expert-traced left ventricular endocardial border than the Mcorr images. Method: This retrospective study used 15 patients who underwent clinically indicated 1.5 T CMR exams with a prototype ECG-gated 3D radial phyllotaxis balanced steady state free precession (bSSFP) sequence. For each reconstruction method, the absolute volume difference (AVD) of the automatically and manually segmented LV volumes was used as the primary quantity to investigate whether 3D DL-based LV segmentation generalized better on Mcorr or Mres 3D whole-heart images. Additionally, we assessed the 3D Dice similarity coefficient between the manual and automatic LV masks of each reconstructed 3D whole-heart image and the sharpness of the LV myocardium-blood pool interface. A two-tail paired Student's t-test (alpha = 0.05) was used to test the significance in this study. Results & Discussion: The AVD in the respiratory Mres reconstruction was lower than the AVD in the respiratory Mcorr reconstruction: 7.73 ± 6.54 ml vs. 20.0 ± 22.4 ml, respectively (n = 15, p-value = 0.03). The 3D Dice coefficient between the DL-segmented masks and the manually segmented masks was higher for Mres images than for Mcorr images: 0.90 ± 0.02 vs. 0.87 ± 0.03 respectively, with a p-value = 0.02. Sharpness on Mres images was higher than on Mcorr images: 0.15 ± 0.05 vs. 0.12 ± 0.04, respectively, with a p-value of 0.014 (n = 15). Conclusion: We conclude that the DL-based 3D automatic LV segmentation network trained on CT images and fine-tuned on MR images generalized better on Mres images than on Mcorr images for quantifying LV volumes.

10.
Front Cardiovasc Med ; 8: 712383, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34660714

RESUMEN

Background: T2 mapping is a magnetic resonance imaging technique that can be used to detect myocardial edema and inflammation. However, the focal nature of myocardial inflammation may render conventional 2D approaches suboptimal and make whole-heart isotropic 3D mapping desirable. While self-navigated 3D radial T2 mapping has been demonstrated to work well at a magnetic field strength of 3T, it results in too noisy maps at 1.5T. We therefore implemented a novel respiratory motion-resolved compressed-sensing reconstruction in order to improve the 3D T2 mapping precision and accuracy at 1.5T, and tested this in a heterogeneous patient cohort. Materials and Methods: Nine healthy volunteers and 25 consecutive patients with suspected acute non-ischemic myocardial injury (sarcoidosis, n = 19; systemic sclerosis, n = 2; acute graft rejection, n = 2, and myocarditis, n = 2) were included. The free-breathing T2 maps were acquired as three ECG-triggered T2-prepared 3D radial volumes. A respiratory motion-resolved reconstruction was followed by image registration of the respiratory states and pixel-wise T2 mapping. The resulting 3D maps were compared to routine 2D T2 maps. The T2 values of segments with and without late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) were compared in patients. Results: In the healthy volunteers, the myocardial T2 values obtained with the 2D and 3D techniques were similar (45.8 ± 1.8 vs. 46.8 ± 2.9 ms, respectively; P = 0.33). Conversely, in patients, T2 values did differ between 2D (46.7 ± 3.6 ms) and 3D techniques (50.1 ± 4.2 ms, P = 0.004). Moreover, with the 2D technique, T2 values of the LGE-positive segments were similar to those of the LGE-negative segments (T2LGE-= 46.2 ± 3.7 vs. T2LGE+ = 47.6 ± 4.1 ms; P = 0.49), whereas the 3D technique did show a significant difference (T2LGE- = 49.3 ± 6.7 vs. T2LGE+ = 52.6 ± 8.7 ms, P = 0.006). Conclusion: Respiratory motion-registered 3D radial imaging at 1.5T led to accurate isotropic 3D whole-heart T2 maps, both in the healthy volunteers and in a small patient cohort with suspected non-ischemic myocardial injury. Significantly higher T2 values were found in patients as compared to controls in 3D but not in 2D, suggestive of the technique's potential to increase the sensitivity of CMR at earlier stages of disease. Further study will be needed to demonstrate its accuracy.

12.
Prog Neurobiol ; 194: 101885, 2020 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32653462

RESUMEN

Eye motion is a major confound for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in neuroscience or ophthalmology. Currently, solutions toward eye stabilisation include participants fixating or administration of paralytics/anaesthetics. We developed a novel MRI protocol for acquiring 3-dimensional images while the eye freely moves. Eye motion serves as the basis for image reconstruction, rather than an impediment. We fully reconstruct videos of the moving eye and head. We quantitatively validate data quality with millimetre resolution in two ways for individual participants. First, eye position based on reconstructed images correlated with simultaneous eye-tracking. Second, the reconstructed images preserve anatomical properties; the eye's axial length measured from MRI images matched that obtained with ocular biometry. The technique operates on a standard clinical setup, without necessitating specialized hardware, facilitating wide deployment. In clinical practice, we anticipate that this may help reduce burdens on both patients and infrastructure, by integrating multiple varieties of assessments into a single comprehensive session. More generally, our protocol is a harbinger for removing the necessity of fixation, thereby opening new opportunities for ethologically-valid, naturalistic paradigms, the inclusion of populations typically unable to stably fixate, and increased translational research such as in awake animals whose eye movements constitute an accessible behavioural readout.


Asunto(s)
Movimientos Oculares/fisiología , Tecnología de Seguimiento Ocular , Neuroimagen Funcional/métodos , Imagenología Tridimensional/métodos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Adulto , Tecnología de Seguimiento Ocular/instrumentación , Tecnología de Seguimiento Ocular/normas , Estudios de Factibilidad , Femenino , Neuroimagen Funcional/normas , Humanos , Imagenología Tridimensional/normas , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética/normas , Masculino , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados
13.
Radiol Artif Intell ; 2(3): e190123, 2020 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33937825

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: To develop and characterize an algorithm that mimics human expert visual assessment to quantitatively determine the quality of three-dimensional (3D) whole-heart MR images. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this study, 3D whole-heart cardiac MRI scans from 424 participants (average age, 57 years ± 18 [standard deviation]; 66.5% men) were used to generate an image quality assessment algorithm. A deep convolutional neural network for image quality assessment (IQ-DCNN) was designed, trained, optimized, and cross-validated on a clinical database of 324 (training set) scans. On a separate test set (100 scans), two hypotheses were tested: (a) that the algorithm can assess image quality in concordance with human expert assessment as assessed by human-machine correlation and intra- and interobserver agreement and (b) that the IQ-DCNN algorithm may be used to monitor a compressed sensing reconstruction process where image quality progressively improves. Weighted κ values, agreement and disagreement counts, and Krippendorff α reliability coefficients were reported. RESULTS: Regression performance of the IQ-DCNN was within the range of human intra- and interobserver agreement and in very good agreement with the human expert (R 2 = 0.78, κ = 0.67). The image quality assessment during compressed sensing reconstruction correlated with the cost function at each iteration and was successfully applied to rank the results in very good agreement with the human expert. CONCLUSION: The proposed IQ-DCNN was trained to mimic expert visual image quality assessment of 3D whole-heart MR images. The results from the IQ-DCNN were in good agreement with human expert reading, and the network was capable of automatically comparing different reconstructed volumes.Supplemental material is available for this article.© RSNA, 2020.

14.
Radiol Cardiothorac Imaging ; 2(6): e200219, 2020 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33385164

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: To implement, validate, and apply a self-gated free-running whole-heart five-dimensional (5D) flow MRI framework to evaluate respiration-driven effects on three-dimensional (3D) hemodynamics in a clinical setting. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this prospective study, a free-running five-dimensional (5D) flow sequence was implemented with 3D radial sampling, self-gating, and a compressed-sensing reconstruction. The 5D flow was evaluated in a pulsatile phantom and adult participants with aortic and/or valvular disease who were enrolled between May and August 2019. Conventional twofold-accelerated four-dimensional (4D) flow of the thoracic aorta with navigator gating was performed as a reference comparison. Continuous parameters were evaluated for parameter normality and were compared between conventional 4D flow and 5D flow using a signed-rank or two-tailed paired t test. Differences between respiratory states were evaluated using a repeated-measure analysis of variance or a nonparametric Friedman test. RESULTS: A total of 20 adult participants (mean age, 49 years ± 17 [standard deviation]; 18 men and two women) were included. In vitro 5D flow results showed excellent agreement with conventional 4D flow-derived values (peak and net flow, <7% difference over all quantified planes). Whole-heart 5D flow data were collected in all participants in 7.65 minutes ± 0.35 (acceleration rate = 36.0-76.9) versus 9.88 minutes ± 3.17 for conventional aortic 4D flow. In vivo, 5D flow demonstrated moderate agreement with conventional 4D flow but demonstrated overestimation in net flow and peak velocity (up to 26% and 12%, respectively) in the ascending aorta and underestimation (<12%) in the arch and descending aorta. Respiratory-resolved analyses of caval veins showed significantly increased net and peak flow in the inferior vena cava in end inspiration compared with end expiration, and the opposite trend was shown in the superior vena cava. CONCLUSION: A free-running 5D flow MRI framework consistently captured cardiac and respiratory motion-resolved 3D hemodynamics in less than 8 minutes. Supplemental material is available for this article. © RSNA, 2020.

15.
Eur Radiol Exp ; 3(1): 29, 2019 07 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31363865

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Whole-heart magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) requires sophisticated methods accounting for respiratory motion. Our purpose was to evaluate the image quality of compressed sensing-based respiratory motion-resolved three-dimensional (3D) whole-heart MRA compared with self-navigated motion-corrected whole-heart MRA in patients with known thoracic aorta dilation. METHODS: Twenty-five patients were prospectively enrolled in this ethically approved study. Whole-heart 1.5-T MRA was acquired using a prototype 3D radial steady-state free-precession free-breathing sequence. The same data were reconstructed with a one-dimensional motion-correction algorithm (1D-MCA) and an extradimensional golden-angle radial sparse parallel reconstruction (XD-GRASP). Subjective image quality was scored and objective image quality was quantified (signal intensity ratio, SIR; vessel sharpness). Wilcoxon, McNemar, and paired t tests were used. RESULTS: Subjective image quality was significantly higher using XD-GRASP compared to 1D-MCA (median 4.5, interquartile range 4.5-5.0 versus 4.0 [2.25-4.75]; p < 0.001), as well as signal homogeneity (3.0 [3.0-3.0] versus 2.0 [2.0-3.0]; p = 0.003), and image sharpness (3.0 [2.0-3.0] vs 2.0 [1.25-3.0]; p < 0.001). SIR with the 1D-MCA and XD-GRASP was 6.1 ± 3.9 versus 7.4 ± 2.5, respectively (p < 0.001); while signal homogeneity was 274.2 ± 265.0 versus 199.8 ± 67.2 (p = 0.129). XD-GRASP provided a higher vessel sharpness (45.3 ± 10.7 versus 40.6 ± 101, p = 0.025). CONCLUSIONS: XD-GRASP-based motion-resolved reconstruction of free-breathing 3D whole-heart MRA datasets provides improved image contrast, sharpness, and signal homogeneity and seems to be a promising technique that overcomes some of the limitations of motion correction or respiratory navigator gating.


Asunto(s)
Aorta Torácica , Enfermedades de la Aorta/diagnóstico por imagen , Enfermedades de la Aorta/fisiopatología , Corazón/diagnóstico por imagen , Angiografía por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Respiración , Anciano , Enfermedades de la Aorta/patología , Dilatación Patológica , Femenino , Humanos , Imagenología Tridimensional , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Movimiento , Estudios Prospectivos
SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA