High-Resolution Free-Breathing Quantitative First-Pass Perfusion Cardiac MR Using Dual-Echo Dixon With Spatio-Temporal Acceleration

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Joao Tourais (Eindhoven University of Technology, Philips Healthcare Nederland, TU Delft - ImPhys/Medical Imaging)

Cian M. Scannell (King’s College London)

Torben Schneider (Philips Healthcare Nederland)

Ebraham Alskaf (King’s College London)

Richard Crawley (King’s College London)

Filippo Bosio (King’s College London)

Javier Sanchez-Gonzalez (Philips Healthcare Iberia, Madrid)

Mariya Doneva (Philips Research)

Christophe Schülke (Philips Research)

More authors (External organisation)

Research Group
ImPhys/Medical Imaging
Copyright
© 2022 Joao Tourais, Cian M. Scannell, Torben Schneider, Ebraham Alskaf, Richard Crawley, Filippo Bosio, Javier Sanchez-Gonzalez, Mariya Doneva, Christophe Schülke, More Authors
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.884221
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 Joao Tourais, Cian M. Scannell, Torben Schneider, Ebraham Alskaf, Richard Crawley, Filippo Bosio, Javier Sanchez-Gonzalez, Mariya Doneva, Christophe Schülke, More Authors
Research Group
ImPhys/Medical Imaging
Volume number
9
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Abstract

Introduction: To develop and test the feasibility of free-breathing (FB), high-resolution quantitative first-pass perfusion cardiac MR (FPP-CMR) using dual-echo Dixon (FOSTERS; Fat-water separation for mOtion-corrected Spatio-TEmporally accelerated myocardial peRfuSion). Materials and Methods: FOSTERS was performed in FB using a dual-saturation single-bolus acquisition with dual-echo Dixon and a dynamically variable Cartesian k-t undersampling (8-fold) approach, with low-rank and sparsity constrained reconstruction, to achieve high-resolution FPP-CMR images. FOSTERS also included automatic in-plane motion estimation and T (Formula presented.) correction to obtain quantitative myocardial blood flow (MBF) maps. High-resolution (1.6 x 1.6 mm2) FB FOSTERS was evaluated in eleven patients, during rest, against standard-resolution (2.6 x 2.6 mm2) 2-fold SENSE-accelerated breath-hold (BH) FPP-CMR. In addition, MBF was computed for FOSTERS and spatial wavelet-based compressed sensing (CS) reconstruction. Two cardiologists scored the image quality (IQ) of FOSTERS, CS, and standard BH FPP-CMR images using a 4-point scale (1–4, non-diagnostic – fully diagnostic). Results: FOSTERS produced high-quality images without dark-rim and with reduced motion-related artifacts, using an 8x accelerated FB acquisition. FOSTERS and standard BH FPP-CMR exhibited excellent IQ with an average score of 3.5 ± 0.6 and 3.4 ± 0.6 (no statistical difference, p > 0.05), respectively. CS images exhibited severe artifacts and high levels of noise, resulting in an average IQ score of 2.9 ± 0.5. MBF values obtained with FOSTERS presented a lower variance than those obtained with CS. Discussion: FOSTERS enabled high-resolution FB FPP-CMR with MBF quantification. Combining motion correction with a low-rank and sparsity-constrained reconstruction results in excellent image quality.