Abstract

BackgroundTraditional cine imaging for cardiac functional assessment requires breath-holding, which can be problematic in some situations. Free-breathing techniques have relied on multiple averages or real-time imaging, producing images that can be spatially and/or temporally blurred. To overcome this, methods have been developed to acquire real-time images over multiple cardiac cycles, which are subsequently motion corrected and reformatted to yield a single image series displaying one cardiac cycle with high temporal and spatial resolution. Application of these algorithms has required significant additional reconstruction time. The use of distributed computing was recently proposed as a way to improve clinical workflow with such algorithms. In this study, we have deployed a distributed computing version of motion corrected re-binning reconstruction for free-breathing evaluation of cardiac function.MethodsTwenty five patients and 25 volunteers underwent cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) for evaluation of left ventricular end-systolic volume (ESV), end-diastolic volume (EDV), and end-diastolic mass. Measurements using motion corrected re-binning were compared to those using breath-held SSFP and to free-breathing SSFP with multiple averages, and were performed by two independent observers. Pearson correlation coefficients and Bland-Altman plots tested agreement across techniques. Concordance correlation coefficient and Bland-Altman analysis tested inter-observer variability. Total scan plus reconstruction times were tested for significant differences using paired t-test.ResultsMeasured volumes and mass obtained by motion corrected re-binning and by averaged free-breathing SSFP compared favorably to those obtained by breath-held SSFP (r = 0.9863/0.9813 for EDV, 0.9550/0.9685 for ESV, 0.9952/0.9771 for mass). Inter-observer variability was good with concordance correlation coefficients between observers across all acquisition types suggesting substantial agreement. Both motion corrected re-binning and averaged free-breathing SSFP acquisition and reconstruction times were shorter than breath-held SSFP techniques (p < 0.0001). On average, motion corrected re-binning required 3 min less than breath-held SSFP imaging, a 37 % reduction in acquisition and reconstruction time.ConclusionsThe motion corrected re-binning image reconstruction technique provides robust cardiac imaging that can be used for quantification that compares favorably to breath-held SSFP as well as multiple average free-breathing SSFP, but can be obtained in a fraction of the time when using cloud-based distributed computing reconstruction.

Highlights

  • Traditional cine imaging for cardiac functional assessment requires breath-holding, which can be problematic in some situations

  • BH and MOtion Corrected re-binning (MOC) sequences were performed in all subjects, while AVE acquisitions were obtained in 11 of the 25 clinical scans due to time constraints specific to the clinical situation and limits on research imaging time

  • This demonstrates acceptable agreement with regard to the sample means for end-diastolic volume (EDV), end-systolic volume (ESV), and end-diastolic mass across image acquisition types, there is a tendency for MOC and AVE to overestimate ESV as compared to BH

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Summary

Introduction

Traditional cine imaging for cardiac functional assessment requires breath-holding, which can be problematic in some situations. Methods have been developed to acquire real-time images over multiple cardiac cycles, which are subsequently motion corrected and reformatted to yield a single image series displaying one cardiac cycle with high temporal and spatial resolution. Application of these algorithms has required significant additional reconstruction time. Standard cine CMR for ventricular volume and functional analysis has utilized balanced steady-state free-precession (SSFP) techniques that use acquisition of data over several heartbeats with k-space segmentation, requiring the patient to maintain breath-holds in order to eliminate respiratory motion artifact [7, 8]. Standard k-space segmented SSFP imaging techniques are intolerant of patient motion and arrhythmia, and can take a significant time to acquire (on the order of 12 to 15 s per breath-hold), which can limit its usefulness in sicker patients or young children

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