Abstract

To develop and evaluate a deep neural network (DeepFittingNet) for T1 /T2 estimation of the most commonly used cardiovascular MR mapping sequences to simplify data processing and improve robustness. DeepFittingNet is a 1D neural network composed of a recurrent neural network (RNN) and a fully connected (FCNN) neural network, in which RNN adapts to the different number of input signals from various sequences and FCNN subsequently predicts A, B, and Tx of a three-parameter model. DeepFittingNet was trained using Bloch-equation simulations of MOLLI and saturation-recovery single-shot acquisition (SASHA) T1 mapping sequences, and T2 -prepared balanced SSFP (T2 -prep bSSFP) T2 mapping sequence, with reference values from the curve-fitting method. Several imaging confounders were simulated to improve robustness. The trained DeepFittingNet was tested using phantom and in-vivo signals, and compared to the curve-fitting algorithm. In testing, DeepFittingNet performed T1 /T2 estimation of four sequences with improved robustness in inversion-recovery T1 estimation. The mean bias in phantom T1 and T2 between the curve-fitting and DeepFittingNet was smaller than 30 and 1 ms, respectively. Excellent agreements between both methods was found in the left ventricle and septum T1 /T2 with a mean bias <6 ms. There was no significant difference in the SD of both the left ventricle and septum T1 /T2 between the two methods. DeepFittingNet trained with simulations of MOLLI, SASHA, and T2 -prep bSSFP performed T1 /T2 estimation tasks for all these most used sequences. Compared with the curve-fitting algorithm, DeepFittingNet improved the robustness for inversion-recovery T1 estimation and had comparable performance in terms of accuracy and precision.

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