Abstract

Abdominal organs are subject to a variety of physiological forces that superimpose their effects to influence local motion and configuration. These forces not only include breathing, but can also arise from cyclic antral contractions and a range of slow configuration changes. To elucidate each individual motion pattern as well as their combined effects, a hierarchical motion model was built for characterization of these 3 motion modes (characterized as deformation maps between states) using golden angle radial MR signals. Breathing motions are characterized first. Antral contraction states are then reconstructed after breathing motion-induced deformation are corrected; slow configuration change states are further extracted from breathing motion-corrected image reconstructions. The hierarchical model is established based on these multimodal states, which can be either individually shown or combined to demonstrate any arbitrary composited motion patterns. The model was evaluated using 20 MR scans acquired from 9 subjects. Poor reproducibility of breathing motions both within as well as between scan sessions was observed, with an average intra-subject difference of 1.6 cycles min−1 for average breathing frequencies of 12.0 cycles min−1. Antral contraction frequency distributions were more stable than breathing, but also presented poor reproducibility between scans with an average difference of 0.3 cycles min−1 for average frequencies of 3.2 cycles min−1. The magnitudes of motions beyond breathing were found to be significant, with 14.4 and 33.8 mm maximal motions measured from antral contraction and slow configuration changes, respectively. Hierarchical motion models have potential in multiple applications in radiotherapy, including improving the accuracy of dose delivery estimation, providing guidance for margin creation, and supporting advanced decisions and strategies for immobilization, treatment monitoring and gating.

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