Abstract

PurposeDevelop a nonrigid motion corrected reconstruction for highly accelerated free‐breathing three‐dimensional (3D) abdominal images without external sensors or additional scans.MethodsThe proposed method accelerates the acquisition by undersampling and performs motion correction directly in the reconstruction using a general matrix description of the acquisition. Data are acquired using a self‐gated 3D golden radial phase encoding trajectory, enabling a two stage reconstruction to estimate and then correct motion of the same data. In the first stage total variation regularized iterative SENSE is used to reconstruct highly undersampled respiratory resolved images. A nonrigid registration of these images is performed to estimate the complex motion in the abdomen. In the second stage, the estimated motion fields are incorporated in a general matrix reconstruction, which uses total variation regularization and incorporates k‐space data from multiple respiratory positions. The proposed approach was tested on nine healthy volunteers and compared against a standard gated reconstruction using measures of liver sharpness, gradient entropy, visual assessment of image sharpness and overall image quality by two experts.ResultsThe proposed method achieves similar quality to the gated reconstruction with nonsignificant differences for liver sharpness (1.18 and 1.00, respectively), gradient entropy (1.00 and 1.00), visual score of image sharpness (2.22 and 2.44), and visual rank of image quality (3.33 and 3.39). An average reduction of the acquisition time from 102 s to 39 s could be achieved with the proposed method.ConclusionIn vivo results demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed method showing similar image quality to the standard gated reconstruction while using data corresponding to a significantly reduced acquisition time. Magn Reson Med, 2015. © 2015 The Authors. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Magn Reson Med 75:1484–1498, 2016. © 2015 The Authors. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance.

Highlights

  • Respiratory motion is a major source of artifacts in abdominal imaging, causing ghosting and blurring in the reconstructed image [1]

  • Data are acquired under free breathing with a self-gated goldenradial phase encoding (G-RPE) trajectory [21,22], enabling the reconstruction of highly undersampled images at various motion states

  • Unlike Buerger et al [16], where iterative SENSE reconstruction [23] was sufficient to independently reconstruct the bins, here we propose to reconstruct all motion states simultaneously using a spatial and temporal total variation regularized iterative SENSE (TVSENSE) approach, allowing reliable motion estimation from bins with higher undersampling factors than those reported in [16]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Respiratory motion is a major source of artifacts in abdominal imaging, causing ghosting and blurring in the reconstructed image [1]. A pixel-by-pixel translation correction has been used to correct nonrigid motion [14] using local autofocus [15] This technique requires the acquisition of additional navigator echoes as well as triggering and gating of a portion of the acquired data. A self-gated motion corrected approach is proposed in Buerger et al [16], where nonrigid motion is estimated from undersampled respiratory resolved images. Data are acquired under free breathing with a self-gated goldenradial phase encoding (G-RPE) trajectory [21,22], enabling the reconstruction of highly undersampled images at various motion states (respiratory bins). The proposed approach was tested on nine healthy volunteers and compared against a standard gated reconstruction

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