Abstract
To develop a quantitative T1-mapping-based synthetic inversion recovery (IRsynth) approach to calculate the optimal inversion time (TI0) for late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) imaging. Prospectively enrolled patients (n = 130, 58 ± 16years) underwent cardiac MRI on a 1.5T system including Look-Locker TI-scout (LL), modified LL IR (MOLLI)-based T1-mapping, and LGE acquisitions. Patients were randomized into two groups: LL group (TI-scout followed T1-mapping) or MOLLI group (T1-mapping followed TI-scout). In both groups, the second acquisition was used to determine the TI0 for LGE. IRsynth images were generated from T1-maps between TI = 200-400ms in 5ms increments. Image quality was rated on a 3-point scale and the remote/background signal intensity ratio (SIR) was calculated. In the LL group (n = 53), the TI-scout-based TI0 was significantly shorter compared to IRsynth [230ms (219-242) vs. 280ms (263-297), P < 0.0001]. The TI0 used for LGE was set 30-40ms longer [261ms (247-276), P < 0.0001] than the TI-scout-based TI0, resulting in a TI0 ~ 20ms shorter than what was obtained by IRsynth (P = 0.0156). In the MOLLI group (n = 63), IRsynth-based TI0 was significantly longer than the TI-scout-based TI0 [298ms (262-334) vs. 242ms (217-267), P = 0.0313]. The quality of myocardial nulling was rated higher [2.4 (2.2-2.5) vs. 2.0 (1.8-2.1), P = 0.0042] and the remote/background SIR was found to be more optimal (1.6 [1.1-2.1] vs. 2.6 [1.8-3.3], P = 0.0256) in the MOLLI group. T1-based IRsynth selects TI0 for LGE more accurately than conventional TI-scout imaging. IRsynth improves TI0 selection by providing excellent visualization of the representative image contrast for LGE images, reducing operator dependence in LGE acquisition.
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