10:00 |
0215.
|
Magnetic Resonance
Encephalography Reconstruction with Magnetic Field
Monitoring
Frederik Testud1, Jakob Assländer1,
Christoph Barmet2, Thimo Hugger1,
Benjamin Zahneisen1, Klaas Prüssmann2,
Jürgen Hennig1, and Maxim Zaitsev1
1Medical Physics, University Medical Center
Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany, 2Biomedical
Engineering, University & ETH Zürich, Zürich,
Switzerland
In the last years field probes have been used for
dynamic magnetic field monitoring in order to reduce
image artifacts due to imperfect gradient coils and
amplifiers, eddy currents, B0 drifts
and patient breathing by taking the measured field
dynamics into account in the image reconstruction. Long
Magnetic Resonance Encephalography experiments suffer
from B0 and gradient drifts. These can be corrected for
by interleaved measurement of the k-space trajectory and
the imaging experiment. This is performed in the present
work with 4 1H field probes combined with 28
channels of a 95 channel head coil.
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10:12 |
0216.
|
Higher-order monitoring of
physiological field fluctuations in brain MRI at 7T
Signe Johanna Vannesjo1, Christoph Barmet1,
Yolanda Duerst1, Simon Gross1,
David O Brunner1, and Klaas P Pruessmann1
1Institute for Biomedical Engineering,
University and ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
Field fluctuations caused by breathing and limb motion
can have a strong degrading effect on quality of brain
images at high fields. Partly, the resulting artifacts
can be corrected for by proper f0-demodulation of the
object signal, based on field data from navigators or
concurrent field monitoring. In this work, we
investigate the contribution of higher-order field
components to the perturbations, and use concurrent
field monitoring up to 2nd order to additionally improve
image quality in high-resolution T2*-weighted GRE
sequences.e 2nd-order concurrent field monitoring to
correct for induced artifacts.
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10:24 |
0217. |
A New Type of Gradient:
The Detection Frequency Gradient. A New Capability:
Retrospective Shimming
Jonathan C Sharp1, Scott B King2,
Mike Smith2, and Boguslaw Tomanek1
1Institute for Biodiagnostics (West),
National Research Council of Canada, Calgary, Alberta,
Canada, 2Institute
for Biodiagnostics, National Research Council of Canada,
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
We introduce a new type of field gradient: the Detection
Frequency Gradient (DFG), with detection frequency
defined as EMF - PRECESSION.
This gradient has some interesting properties, most
notably the ability to adjust the shim retrospectively
(post-acquisition). This represents genuine B0-shimming:
signals from spins dephased by unwanted B0-gradients are
brought back in to phase. This capability arises from a
dynamically-defined B1 detector field, synthesized
retrospectively by a time-dependent weighted combination
of NMR signals from a receive coil array. Applications
include post-acquisition shimming and eddy-current
correction. The signal weightings are calculated from
receiver coil field maps and a target B0-inhomogeneity.
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10:36 |
0218.
|
Automatic off-resonance
correction with piecewise linear autofocus
Travis Smith1, and Krishna Nayak1
1Electrical Engineering, University of
Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States
We present a new method to correct off-resonance
blurring in spiral and radial images without knowledge
of the field map. The image is divided into blocks and
linear field map estimation and correction are performed
on each block. The local linear coefficients are
estimated through a combination of k-space spectral
analysis and mapdrift, an image-domain correlation
technique. The deblurring performance is comparable to
field map-based techniques. The method does not use
objective functions, requires only a blurry image
(magnitude and phase) and a trajectory time map, and is
suitable for low-SNR and fine-resolution images.
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10:48 |
0219. |
Novel automatic
off-resonance correction without field maps in spiral
imaging using L1 minimization
Hisamoto Moriguchi1, Kohki Yoshikawa2,
Morio Shimada2, Shin-ichi Urayama3,
Yutaka Imai1, Manabu Honda4, and
Takashi Hanakawa4
1Radiology, Tokai University, Isehara,
Kanagawa, Japan, 2Radiological
Sciences, Komazawa University, Tokyo, Japan, 3Human
Brain Research Center, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan, 4Functional
Brain Research, National Center of Neurology and
Psychiatry, Tokyo, Japan
A primary disadvantage of spiral imaging is blurring
artifacts due to off-resonance effects. Most spiral
off-resonance correction methods require a frequency
field map. However, to acquire a field map increases the
scan time. In this study, a novel spiral automatic
off-resonance correction method without field maps has
been demonstrated. In the newly proposed method, L1
minimization is used as a new criterion to determine the
correct off-resonance frequencies. Frequency estimation
process of the L1 min off-resonance correction is robust
and the estimated field map shows reduced errors. The L1
min off-resonance correction has significant potential
for faster spiral acquisition.
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11:00 |
0220.
|
Chemical species
separation with simultaneous estimation of field map and T2*
using a k-space formulation
Jose Luis Honorato1,2, Vicente Parot1,2,
Cristian Tejos1,2, Sergio Uribe2,3,
and Pablo Irarrazaval1,2
1Electrical Engineering, Pontificia
Universidad Catolica de Chile, Santiago, Chile, 2Biomedical
Imaging Center, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de
Chile, Santiago, Chile, 3Department
of Radiology, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile,
Santiago, Chile
In this abstract we present a novel technique for
chemical species separation using a signal model
formulated entirely in k-space. The model includes T2*
decay, field inhomogeneity and a variable time map. By
using a variable time map this method is able to
separate species without artifacts produced by chemical
shift, field inhomogeneity or T2* decay.
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11:12 |
0221.
|
Image Denoising Exploiting
Sparsity and Low Rank Approximation (DSLR) in Slide Encoding
for Metal Artifact Correction
Sangcheon Choi1, Hahnsung Kim2,
and Jaeseok Park1
1Brain and Cognitive Engineering, Korea
University, Seoul, Korea, Republic of, 2Electrical
and Electronic Engineering, Yonsei University, Seoul,
Korea, Republic of
Metal-induced field inhomogeneity is one of the major
concerns in magnetic resonance imaging near metallic
implants. Slice encoding for metal artifact correction (SEMAC)
is an effective way to correct severe metal artifacts by
employing additional z-phase encoding steps for each
excited slice against metal-induced field inhomogeneity
and view angle tilting (VAT). Despite the advantages of
metal artifact correction, since noisy resolved pixels
are included in image reconstruction, SEMAC suffers from
noise amplification. SEMAC with noise reduction , which
employs a two-step approach (rank-1 approximation along
the coil dimension followed by soft thresholding in the
slice direction), does not consider noise correlation of
coils and results in a direct tradeoff between image
accuracy and de-noising. Thus, to further expedite noise
reduction in SEMAC, in this work we develop a novel
image de-noising algorithm that exploits 1) low-rank
approximation using strong correlation of pixels (x-z)
in the slice direction (t), 2) Best Linear Unbiased
Estimator (BLUE) image combination in the coil direction
with noise correlation, and 3) recovery of distorted
slice profile using the sparsity of signals in the slice
direction with orthogonal matching pursuit (OMP).
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11:24 |
0222. |
Extracting Phase Contrast
from MAVRIC Images Near Metal Implants
Kevin M Koch1, Matthew F Koff2,
Weitian Chen3, and Hollis G Potter2
1Applied Science Laboratory, GE Healthcare,
Milwaukee, WI, United States, 2Department
of Radiology and Imaging, Hospital for Special Surgery,
New York, NY, United States, 3Applied
Science Laboratory, GE Healthcare, Menlo Park, CA,
United States
The MAVRIC Multi-Spectral Imaging technique acquires 4D
datasets, resolving spins around metal implants in space
and Larmor frequency offset. Here, we demonstrate a
novel processing technique that extracts phase-contrast
images from conventional MAVRIC acquisitions. Dominant
trends induced by metal hardware in the phased images
are removed to reveal underlying tissue with
phase-contrast. The presented method may offer a means
to differentiate types of adverse tissue responses near
metal implants.
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11:36 |
0223.
|
Fully-Refocused
Spatiotemporally-Encoded MRI: Robust MR Imaging in the
presence of metallic implants
Noam Ben-Eliezer1, Eddy Solomon2,
Elad Harel3, Nava Nevo4, and Lucio
Frydman2
1Center for Biomedical Imaging, New-York
University, New-York, NY, United States, 2Chemical-Physics,
Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel,3Chemistry,
Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, United States, 4Biological-Regulation,
Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel
A new MR encoding approach has been recently introduced
based on sequential encoding of the image spatial domain.
An interesting aspect of this Spatiotemporal-Encoding (SPEN)
technique, stems from its ability to carry out a
progressive, voxel-by-voxel refocusing of all T2* dephasing
throughout the data acquisition, allowing it to overcome
sizable field inhomogeneities. This work demonstrated
SPEN’s potential for imaging near metallic implants,
using in-vivo mouse models. Cartesian and Back-Projected
SPEN MRI were implemented on a 7T microimaging unit, and
compared versus conventional Spin-Echo scheme analogues.
In all cases, unambiguously superior images arise from
the fully refocused spatiotemporally-encoded protocols.
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11:48 |
0224. |
Effective and Flexible
Eddy Current Compensation for Delta Relaxation Enhanced MR
Imaging
Uvo Christoph Hoelscher1, and Peter Michael
Jakob1,2
1Research Center for Magnetic Resonance
Bavaria, Wuerzburg, Germany, 2Experimental
Physics 5 (Biophysics), University of Wuerzburg,
Wuerzburg, Germany
A new imaging method called dreMR uses a variable B0 field
to generate a novel MR contrast. The variable B0 field
induces eddy currents which substantially decrease the
quality of dreMR images. The abstract presents a
compensation method which can easily be implemented in
the scanner software. The method can be used for any
imaging sequence, does not require additional hardware
and reduces the eddy current artifacts to a very small
level.
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