Abstract

BackgroundCine Displacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes (DENSE) provides accurate quantitative imaging of cardiac mechanics with rapid displacement and strain analysis; however, image acquisition times are relatively long. Compressed sensing (CS) with parallel imaging (PI) can generally provide high-quality images recovered from data sampled below the Nyquist rate. The purposes of the present study were to develop CS-PI-accelerated acquisition and reconstruction methods for cine DENSE, to assess their accuracy for cardiac imaging using retrospective undersampling, and to demonstrate their feasibility for prospectively-accelerated 2D cine DENSE imaging in a single breathhold.MethodsAn accelerated cine DENSE sequence with variable-density spiral k-space sampling and golden angle rotations through time was implemented. A CS method, Block LOw-rank Sparsity with Motion-guidance (BLOSM), was combined with sensitivity encoding (SENSE) for the reconstruction of under-sampled multi-coil spiral data. Seven healthy volunteers and 7 patients underwent 2D cine DENSE imaging with fully-sampled acquisitions (14–26 heartbeats in duration) and with prospectively rate-2 and rate-4 accelerated acquisitions (14 and 8 heartbeats in duration). Retrospectively- and prospectively-accelerated data were reconstructed using BLOSM-SENSE and SENSE. Image quality of retrospectively-undersampled data was quantified using the relative root mean square error (rRMSE). Myocardial displacement and circumferential strain were computed for functional assessment, and linear correlation and Bland-Altman analyses were used to compare accelerated acquisitions to fully-sampled reference datasets.ResultsFor retrospectively-undersampled data, BLOSM-SENSE provided similar or lower rRMSE at rate-2 and lower rRMSE at rate-4 acceleration compared to SENSE (p < 0.05, ANOVA). Similarly, for retrospective undersampling, BLOSM-SENSE provided similar or better correlation with reference displacement and strain data at rate-2 and better correlation at rate-4 acceleration compared to SENSE. Bland-Altman analyses showed similar or better agreement for displacement and strain data at rate-2 and better agreement at rate-4 using BLOSM-SENSE compared to SENSE for retrospectively-undersampled data. Rate-2 and rate-4 prospectively-accelerated cine DENSE provided good image quality and expected values of displacement and strain.ConclusionsBLOSM-SENSE-accelerated spiral cine DENSE imaging with 2D displacement encoding can be acquired in a single breathhold of 8–14 heartbeats with high image quality and accurate assessment of myocardial displacement and circumferential strain.

Highlights

  • Cine Displacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes (DENSE) provides accurate quantitative imaging of cardiac mechanics with rapid displacement and strain analysis; image acquisition times are relatively long

  • Difference magnitude and phase images of the phantom computed by subtracting the reconstructed images from the fully-sampled images are shown, demonstrating artifact reduction using Block LOw-rank Sparsity with Motion-guidance (BLOSM) compared to zeropadding. relative root mean square error (rRMSE) increased a small amount from rate-2 to rate-4 acceleration, and increased more between rate-4 and rate-8 acceleration (Fig. 3)

  • The comparison of BLOSM-sensitivity encoding (SENSE) without and with motion tracking showed that the resulting images appeared nearly identical, and this qualitative assessment was confirmed by quantitative error metrics

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Summary

Introduction

Cine Displacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes (DENSE) provides accurate quantitative imaging of cardiac mechanics with rapid displacement and strain analysis; image acquisition times are relatively long. Recently cine displacement encoding with stimulated echoes (DENSE) [9, 10] has emerged as a strain imaging technique that, compared to tagging, has equivalent accuracy and better interobserver variability [11]. The longer scan times for cine DENSE occur because DENSE is a phase-contrast method, requiring n + 1 separate acquisitions in order to reconstruct phase images encoded for displacement in n directions [15]. Acceleration using data undersampling has the potential to enable cine DENSE scans with 2D displacement encoding in less than 10 s without substantial compromises in spatiotemporal resolution and accuracy, which would represent a clinically-convenient single-breathhold protocol. Acceleration using conventional parallel imaging (PI) decreases the signalto-noise ratio (SNR) [16] and may compromise the accuracy of the displacement and strain measurements

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