Abstract
Summary The aim of this study is to investigate the feasibility of extracting motion information from a single scan with one low VENC, followed by robust phase unwrapping, for characterizing both intra-ventricular flow and myocardial motion. Background Intra-ventricular blood flow and regional myocardial motion are two key components used in assessing cardiac function. Both can be quantified using phase contrast MRI, but typically require two imaging sequences to be acquired - one with a high velocity encoding value (VENC) and one with a low VENC, selected to optimize velocity sensitivity while avoiding aliasing. In an effort to obtain velocity information from both ventricular blood and myocardial motion in one acquisition, dual-VENC techniques (Buchenberg, ISMRM 2011) have been proposed and evaluated. Methods MR imaging was performed on a 3.0-T whole-body scanner (MR 750, GE Medical Systems). Phase-contrast images with through-plane velocity-encoding were acquired in the short-axis plane with a retrospectively triggered 2D fast cine phase contrast pulse sequence (segmented k-space gradient-echo; TR/TE, 7.3/4.4 ms; flip angle 15 degree, slice thickness 8 mm) with firstorder flow compensation in all dimensions to minimize artifacts from flow and motion. Three VENCs - 75, 20 and 10 cm/s - were used and the images acquired with VENC = 75 cm/s were used as a reference. The acquisition time (per VENC) was about 15 seconds, enabling
Highlights
Intra-ventricular blood flow and regional myocardial motion are two key components used in assessing cardiac function
Summary The aim of this study is to investigate the feasibility of extracting motion information from a single scan with one low VENC, followed by robust phase unwrapping, for characterizing both intra-ventricular flow and myocardial motion
Mid-ventricular phase-contrast images corresponding to peak systole and early filling are shown in Figures 1 and 2, respectively
Summary
Intra-ventricular blood flow and regional myocardial motion are two key components used in assessing cardiac function. Both can be quantified using phase contrast MRI, but typically require two imaging sequences to be acquired - one with a high velocity encoding value (VENC) and one with a low VENC, selected to optimize velocity sensitivity while avoiding aliasing. In an effort to obtain velocity information from both ventricular blood and myocardial motion in one acquisition, dual-VENC techniques (Buchenberg, ISMRM 2011) have been proposed and evaluated
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