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First-pass myocardial perfusion MRI with reduced subendocardial dark-rim artifact using optimized Cartesian sampling

Authors :
Rohan Dharmakumar
Xiaoming Bi
C. Noel Bairey Merz
Janet Wei
Reza Arsanjani
Hsin-Jung Yang
Behzad Sharif
Zhengwei Zhou
Debiao Li
Source :
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging. 45:542-555
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Wiley, 2016.

Abstract

PURPOSE The presence of subendocardial dark-rim artifact (DRA) remains an ongoing challenge in first-pass perfusion (FPP) cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We propose a free-breathing FPP imaging scheme with Cartesian sampling that is optimized to minimize the DRA and readily enables near-instantaneous image reconstruction. MATERIALS AND METHODS The proposed FPP method suppresses Gibbs ringing effects-a major underlying factor for the DRA-by "shaping" the underlying point spread function through a two-step process: 1) an undersampled Cartesian sampling scheme that widens the k-space coverage compared to the conventional scheme; and 2) a modified parallel-imaging scheme that incorporates optimized apodization (k-space data filtering) to suppress Gibbs-ringing effects. Healthy volunteer studies (n = 10) were performed to compare the proposed method against the conventional Cartesian technique-both using a saturation-recovery gradient-echo sequence at 3T. Furthermore, FPP imaging studies using the proposed method were performed in infarcted canines (n = 3), and in two symptomatic patients with suspected coronary microvascular dysfunction for assessment of myocardial hypoperfusion. RESULTS Width of the DRA and the number of DRA-affected myocardial segments were significantly reduced in the proposed method compared to the conventional approach (width: 1.3 vs. 2.9 mm, P < 0.001; number of segments: 2.6 vs. 8.7; P < 0.0001). The number of slices with severe DRA was markedly lower for the proposed method (by 10-fold). The reader-assigned image quality scores were similar (P = 0.2), although the quantified myocardial signal-to-noise ratio was lower for the proposed method (P < 0.05). Animal studies showed that the proposed method can detect subendocardial perfusion defects and patient results were consistent with the gold-standard invasive test. CONCLUSION The proposed free-breathing Cartesian FPP imaging method significantly reduces the prevalence of severe DRAs compared to the conventional approach while maintaining similar resolution and image quality. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE 2 J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2017;45:542-555.

Details

ISSN :
10531807
Volume :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........734918757c624f8a90c22012464fc96b