Abstract
BackgroundThree-dimensional time-resolved phase-contrast cardiovascular magnetic resonance (4D flow CMR) enables the quantification and visualisation of blood flow, but its clinical applicability remains hampered by its long scan time. The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of compressed sensing (CS) with on-line reconstruction to accelerate the acquisition and reconstruction of 4D flow CMR of the thoracic aorta.Methods4D flow CMR of the thoracic aorta was acquired in 20 healthy subjects using CS with acceleration factors ranging from 4 to 10. As a reference, conventional parallel imaging (SENSE) with acceleration factor 2 was used. Flow curves, net flows, peak flows and peak velocities were extracted from six contours along the aorta. To measure internal data consistency, a quantitative particle trace analysis was performed. Additionally, scan-rescan, inter- and intraobserver reproducibility were assessed. Subsequently, 4D flow CMR with CS factor 6 was acquired in 3 patients with differing aortopathies. The flow patterns resulting from particle trace visualisation were qualitatively analysed.ResultsAll collected data were successfully acquired and reconstructed on-line. The average acquisition time including respiratory navigator efficiency with CS factor 6 was 5:02 ± 2:23 min while reconstruction took approximately 9 min. For CS factors of 8 or less, mean differences in net flow, peak flow and peak velocity as compared to SENSE were below 2.2 ± 7.8 ml/cycle, 4.6 ± 25.2 ml/s and − 7.9 ± 13.0 cm/s, respectively. For a CS factor of 10 differences reached 5.4 ± 8.0 ml/cycle, 14.4 ± 28.3 ml/s and − 4.0 ± 12.2 cm/s. Scan-rescan analysis yielded mean differences in net flow of − 0.7 ± 4.9 ml/cycle for SENSE and − 0.2 ± 8.5 ml/cycle for CS factor of 6.ConclusionsA six- to eightfold acceleration of 4D flow CMR using CS is feasible. Up to a CS acceleration rate of 6, no statistically significant differences in measured flow parameters could be observed with respect to the reference technique. Acquisitions in patients with aortopathies confirm the potential to integrate the proposed method in a clinical routine setting, whereby its main benefits are scan-time savings and direct on-line reconstruction.
Highlights
Three-dimensional time-resolved phase-contrast cardiovascular magnetic resonance (4D flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (CMR)) enables the quantification and visualisation of blood flow, but its clinical applicability remains hampered by its long scan time
A range of acceleration techniques that exploit spatio-temporal correlations have been applied to 4D flow CMR of the heart and/or surrounding vessels including k-t BLAST [7], k-t GRAPPA [8, 9] or k-t PCA [10, 11] allowing for acceleration factors in the order of 5 to 8
Acceleration techniques based on compressed sensing (CS) − often combined with non-Cartesian sampling, with and without exploitation of spatio-temporal correlations − have been applied to 4D flow CMR achieving similar acceleration rates [12,13,14,15]
Summary
Three-dimensional time-resolved phase-contrast cardiovascular magnetic resonance (4D flow CMR) enables the quantification and visualisation of blood flow, but its clinical applicability remains hampered by its long scan time. As compared to 2D PC-CMR which is widely available and used in standardised CMR protocols [3, 4], 4D flow CMR currently remains technically challenging and is rarely used in clinical routine settings. This is mainly due to the inherently long scan time which is further increased by the need for respiratory motion compensation [5]. One major disadvantage of most proposed CS techniques is their relatively long off-line reconstruction time, reportedly being in the range of 45 to 60 min [12, 13, 16]
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
More From: Journal of cardiovascular magnetic resonance : official journal of the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.