Cardiac phase-resolved late gadolinium enhancement imaging

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

S.D. Weingärtner (TU Delft - ImPhys/Computational Imaging, TU Delft - ImPhys/Medical Imaging)

Omer Burak Demirel (University of Minnesota)

Francisco. Gama (St Bartholomew’s Hospital, London)

Iain Pierce (St Bartholomew’s Hospital, London)

Thomas A. Treibel (University College London, St Bartholomew’s Hospital, London)

Jeanette Schulz-Menger (HELIOS Klinikum Berlin-Buch and DZHK, Berlin, Charite-Medical University Berlin)

Mehmet Akcakaya (University of Minnesota)

Research Group
ImPhys/Computational Imaging
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.917180
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Research Group
ImPhys/Computational Imaging
Volume number
9
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Abstract

Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) with cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging is the clinical reference for assessment of myocardial scar and focal fibrosis. However, current LGE techniques are confined to imaging of a single cardiac phase, which hampers assessment of scar motility and does not allow cross-comparison between multiple phases. In this work, we investigate a three step approach to obtain cardiac phase-resolved LGE images: (1) Acquisition of cardiac phase-resolved imaging data with varying T1 weighting. (2) Generation of semi-quantitative T*1 maps for each cardiac phase. (3) Synthetization of LGE contrast to obtain functional LGE images. The proposed method is evaluated in phantom imaging, six healthy subjects at 3T and 20 patients at 1.5T. Phantom imaging at 3T demonstrates consistent contrast throughout the cardiac cycle with a coefficient of variation of 2.55 ± 0.42%. In-vivo results show reliable LGE contrast with thorough suppression of the myocardial tissue is healthy subjects. The contrast between blood and myocardium showed moderate variation throughout the cardiac cycle in healthy subjects (coefficient of variation 18.2 ± 3.51%). Images were acquired at 40–60 ms and 80 ms temporal resolution, at 3T and 1.5, respectively. Functional LGE images acquired in patients with myocardial scar visualized scar tissue throughout the cardiac cycle, albeit at noticeably lower imaging resolution and noise resilience than the reference technique. The proposed technique bears the promise of integrating the advantages of phase-resolved CMR with LGE imaging, but further improvements in the acquisition quality are warranted for clinical use.