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Whole‐heart, ungated, free‐breathing, cardiac‐phase‐resolved myocardial perfusion MRI by using Continuous Radial Interleaved simultaneous Multi‐slice acquisitions at sPoiled steady‐state (CRIMP)

Authors :
Ravi Ranjan
Ganesh Adluru
Ye Tian
Jason Mendes
Brent D. Wilson
Alexander Ross
Edward V. R. DiBella
Source :
Magn Reson Med
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Purpose To develop a whole-heart, free-breathing, non-electrocardiograph (ECG)-gated, cardiac-phase-resolved myocardial perfusion MRI framework (CRIMP; Continuous Radial Interleaved simultaneous Multi-slice acquisitions at sPoiled steady-state) and test its quantification feasibility. Methods CRIMP used interleaved radial simultaneous multi-slice (SMS) slice groups to cover the whole heart in 9 or 12 short-axis slices. The sequence continuously acquired data without magnetization preparation, ECG gating or breath-holding, and captured multiple cardiac phases. Images were reconstructed by a motion-compensated patch-based locally low-rank reconstruction. Bloch simulations were performed to study the signal-to-noise ratio/contrast-to-noise ratio (SNR/CNR) for CRIMP and to study the steady-state signal under motion. Seven patients were scanned with CRIMP at stress and rest to develop the sequence. One human and two dogs were scanned at rest with a dual-bolus method to test the quantification feasibility of CRIMP. The dual-bolus scans were performed using both CRIMP and an ungated radial SMS saturation recovery (SMS-SR) sequence with injection dose = 0.075 mmol/kg to compare the sequences in terms of SNR, cardiac phase resolution and quantitative myocardial blood flow (MBF). Results Perfusion images with multiple cardiac phases in all image slices with a temporal resolution of 72 ms/frame were obtained. Simulations and in-vivo acquisitions showed CRIMP kept the inner slices in steady-state regardless of motion. CRIMP outperformed SMS-SR in slice coverage (9 over 6), SNR (mean 20% improvement), and provided cardiac phase resolution. CRIMP and SMS-SR sequences provided comparable MBF values (rest systolic CRIMP = 0.58 ± 0.07, SMS-SR = 0.61 ± 0.16). Conclusion CRIMP allows for whole-heart, cardiac-phase-resolved myocardial perfusion images without ECG-gating or breath-holding. The sequence can provide MBF if an accurate arterial input function is obtained separately.

Details

ISSN :
15222594 and 07403194
Volume :
84
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8ef6bb77b1a28dae91af600b73ca05b8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.28337