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Single projection driven real-time multi-contrast (SPIDERM) MR imaging using pre-learned spatial subspace and linear transformation.

Authors :
Han P
Chen J
Xiao J
Han F
Hu Z
Yang W
Cao M
Ling DC
Li D
Christodoulou AG
Fan Z
Source :
Physics in medicine and biology [Phys Med Biol] 2022 Jun 27; Vol. 67 (13). Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Jun 27.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective. To develop and test the feasibility of a novel Single ProjectIon DrivEn Real-time Multi-contrast (SPIDERM) MR imaging technique that can generate real-time 3D images on-the-fly with flexible contrast weightings and a low latency. Approach. In SPIDERM, a 'prep' scan is first performed, with sparse k-space sampling periodically interleaved with the central k-space line (navigator data), to learn a subject-specific model, incorporating a spatial subspace and a linear transformation between navigator data and subspace coordinates. A 'live' scan is then performed by repeatedly acquiring the central k-space line only to dynamically determine subspace coordinates. With the 'prep'-learned subspace and 'live' coordinates, real-time 3D images are generated on-the-fly with computationally efficient matrix multiplication. When implemented based on a multi-contrast pulse sequence, SPIDERM further allows for data-driven image contrast regeneration to convert real-time contrast-varying images into contrast-frozen images at user's discretion while maintaining motion states. Both digital phantom and in-vivo experiments were performed to evaluate the technical feasibility of SPIDERM. Main results. The elapsed time from the input of the central k-space line to the generation of real-time contrast-frozen 3D images was approximately 45 ms, permitting a latency of 55 ms or less. Motion displacement measured from SPIDERM and reference images showed excellent correlation (R2≥0.983). Geometric variation from the ground truth in the digital phantom was acceptable as demonstrated by pancreas contour analysis (Dice ≥ 0.84, mean surface distance ≤ 0.95 mm). Quantitative image quality metrics showed good consistency between reference images and contrast-varying SPIDREM images in in-vivo studies (meanNMRSE=0.141,PSNR=30.12,SSIM=0.88). Significance. SPIDERM is capable of generating real-time multi-contrast 3D images with a low latency. An imaging framework based on SPIDERM has the potential to serve as a standalone package for MR-guided radiation therapy by offering adaptive simulation through a 'prep' scan and real-time image guidance through a 'live' scan.<br /> (© 2022 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1361-6560
Volume :
67
Issue :
13
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Physics in medicine and biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35697010
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6560/ac783e