1. Accelerated free-breathing 3D whole-heart magnetic resonance angiography with a radial phyllotaxis trajectory, compressed sensing, and curvelet transform
- Author
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Mehdi H. Moghari, Yan Chi Ivy Chan, Andrew J. Powell, Wai Yan Ryana Fok, Jennifer Romanowicz, and Jihye Jang
- Subjects
Adult ,Computer science ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biophysics ,Article ,Magnetic resonance angiography ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,0302 clinical medicine ,Wavelet ,Data acquisition ,law ,Curvelet ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Computer vision ,Cartesian coordinate system ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Respiration ,Wavelet transform ,Heart ,Compressed sensing ,Trajectory ,Female ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Magnetic Resonance Angiography ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Purpose To develop and validate an accelerated free-breathing 3D whole-heart magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) technique using a radial k-space trajectory with compressed sensing and curvelet transform. Method A 3D radial phyllotaxis trajectory was implemented to traverse the centerline of k-space immediately before the segmented whole-heart MRA data acquisition at each cardiac cycle. The k-space centerlines were used to correct the respiratory-induced heart motion in the acquired MRA data. The corrected MRA data were then reconstructed by a novel compressed sensing algorithm using curvelets as the sparsifying domain. The proposed 3D whole-heart MRA technique (radial CS curvelet) was then prospectively validated against compressed sensing with a conventional wavelet transform (radial CS wavelet) and a standard Cartesian acquisition in terms of scan time and border sharpness. Results Fifteen patients (females 10, median age 34-year-old) underwent 3D whole-heart MRA imaging using a standard Cartesian trajectory and our proposed radial phyllotaxis trajectory. Scan time for radial phyllotaxis was significantly shorter than Cartesian (4.88 ± 0.86 min. vs. 6.84 ± 1.79 min., P-value = 0.004). Radial CS curvelet border sharpness was slightly lower than Cartesian and, for the majority of vessels, was significantly better than radial CS wavelet (P-value Conclusion The proposed technique of 3D whole-heart MRA acquisition with a radial CS curvelet has a shorter scan time and slightly lower vessel sharpness compared to the Cartesian acquisition with radial profile ordering, and has slightly better sharpness than radial CS wavelet. Future work on this technique includes additional clinical trials and extending this technique to 3D cine imaging.
- Published
- 2021