Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

High-Resolution, Respiratory-Resolved Coronary MRA Using a Phyllotaxis-Reordered Variable-Density 3D Cones Trajectory

Published 27 Oct 2019 in physics.med-ph and eess.IV | (1910.12199v1)

Abstract: Purpose: To develop a respiratory-resolved motion-compensation method for free-breathing, high-resolution coronary magnetic resonance angiography using a 3D cones trajectory. Methods: To achieve respiratory-resolved 0.98 mm resolution images in a clinically relevant scan time, we undersample the imaging data with a variable-density 3D cones trajectory. For retrospective motion compensation, translational estimates from 3D image-based navigators (3D iNAVs) are used to bin the imaging data into four phases from end-expiration to end-inspiration. To ensure pseudo-random undersampling within each respiratory phase, we devise a phyllotaxis readout ordering scheme mindful of eddy current artifacts in steady state free precession imaging. Following binning, residual 3D translational motion within each phase is computed using the 3D iNAVs and corrected for in the imaging data. The noise-like aliasing characteristic of the combined phyllotaxis and cones sampling pattern is leveraged in a compressed sensing reconstruction with spatial and temporal regularization to reduce aliasing in each of the respiratory phases. Results: In a volunteer and 5 patients, respiratory motion compensation using the proposed method yields improved image quality compared to non-respiratory-resolved approaches with no motion correction and with 3D translational correction. Qualitative assessment by two cardiologists indicates the superior sharpness of coronary segments reconstructed with the proposed method (P < 0.01). Conclusion: The proposed method better mitigates motion artifacts in free-breathing, high-resolution coronary angiography exams compared to translational correction.

Citations (1)

Summary

Paper to Video (Beta)

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.