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Compressed sensing acceleration of biexponential 3D‐T 1ρ relaxation mapping of knee cartilage
- Source :
- Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. 81:863-880
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2018.
-
Abstract
- Purpose Use compressed sensing (CS) for 3D biexponential spin-lattice relaxation time in the rotating frame (T1ρ ) mapping of knee cartilage, reducing the total scan time and maintaining the quality of estimated biexponential T1ρ parameters (short and long relaxation times and corresponding fractions) comparable to fully sampled scans. Methods Fully sampled 3D-T1ρ -weighted data sets were retrospectively undersampled by factors 2-10. CS reconstruction using 12 different sparsifying transforms were compared for biexponential T1ρ -mapping of knee cartilage, including temporal and spatial wavelets and finite differences, dictionary from principal component analysis (PCA), k-means singular value decomposition (K-SVD), exponential decay models, and also low rank and low rank plus sparse models. Synthetic phantom (N = 6) and in vivo human knee cartilage data sets (N = 7) were included in the experiments. Spatial filtering before biexponential T1ρ parameter estimation was also tested. Results Most CS methods performed satisfactorily for an acceleration factor (AF) of 2, with relative median normalized absolute deviation (MNAD) around 10%. Some sparsifying transforms, such as low rank with spatial finite difference (L + S SFD), spatiotemporal finite difference (STFD), and exponential dictionaries (EXP) significantly improved this performance, reaching MNAD below 15% with AF up to 10, when spatial filtering was used. Conclusion Accelerating biexponential 3D-T1ρ mapping of knee cartilage with CS is feasible. The best results were obtained by STFD, EXP, and L + S SFD regularizers combined with spatial prefiltering. These 3 CS methods performed satisfactorily on synthetic phantom as well as in vivo knee cartilage for AFs up to 10, with median error below 15%.
- Subjects :
- Rank (linear algebra)
Imaging phantom
030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging
Exponential function
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Wavelet
Compressed sensing
Singular value decomposition
Principal component analysis
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
Exponential decay
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Biomedical engineering
Mathematics
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15222594 and 07403194
- Volume :
- 81
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........6459eb9bf70b94b92e087f04560fef30
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.27416