Abstract

BackgroundGibbs ringing has been shown as a possible source of dark rim artifacts in myocardial perfusion studies. This type of artifact is usually described as transient, lasting a few heart beats, and localised in random segments of the myocardial wall. Dark rim artifacts are known to be unpredictably variable. This article aims to illustrate that a sub-pixel shift, i.e. a small displacement of the pixels with respect to the endocardial border, can result in different Gibbs ringing and hence different artifacts. Therefore a hypothesis for one cause of dark rim artifact variability is given based on the sub-pixel position of the endocardial border. This article also demonstrates the consequences for Gibbs artifacts when two different methods of image interpolation are applied (post-FFT interpolation, and pre-FFT zero-filling).ResultsSub-pixel shifting of in vivo perfusion studies was shown to change the appearance of Gibbs artifacts. This effect was visible in the original uninterpolated images, and in the post-FFT interpolated images. The same shifted data interpolated by pre-FFT zero-filling exhibited much less variability in the Gibbs artifact. The in vivo findings were confirmed by phantom imaging and numerical simulations.ConclusionUnless pre-FFT zero-filling interpolation is performed, Gibbs artifacts are very dependent on the position of the subendocardial wall within the pixel. By introducing sub-pixel shifts relative to the endocardial border, some of the variability of the dark rim artifacts in different myocardial segments, in different patients and from frame to frame during first-pass perfusion due to cardiac and respiratory motion can be explained. Image interpolation by zero-filling can be used to minimize this dependency.

Highlights

  • Gibbs ringing has been shown as a possible source of dark rim artifacts in myocardial perfusion studies

  • Myocardial perfusion imaging with magnetic resonance, combined with other Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance scans such as Late Gadolinium Enhancement, is developing into an alternative to nuclear medicine [1,2,3,4,5]

  • It should be noted that this work focussed on the Gibbs artifact's contribution to perfusion dark rim artifact (DRA) and other factors that contribute to DRAs are not considered here

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Summary

Introduction

Gibbs ringing has been shown as a possible source of dark rim artifacts in myocardial perfusion studies. This type of artifact is usually described as transient, lasting a few heart beats, and localised in random segments of the myocardial wall. A hypothesis for one cause of dark rim artifact variability is given based on the sub-pixel position of the endocardial border. There have been several possible mechanisms described in literature that can explain DRAs including cardiac motion during image acquisition [6], Gibbs ringing in the subendocardial bor-. Cardiac motion tends to cause artifacts more toward midwall in the myocardium [6], and non-uniform k-space weighting point-spread function distortion [1] was assumed negligible for the perfusion setup used in this study

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