16:00 |
0652. |
3D Modeling of Spatial
Resolution Limitations in Contrast-Enhanced MRA Related to
the Contrast Bolus Profile using an Analysis of the
Modulation Transfer Function
Jeffrey H. Maki1, Toshimasa J. Clark1,
and Gregory J. Wilson1
1Radiology, University of Washington,
Seattle, WA, United States
Image quality and resolution in CE-MRA depend in part on
the rate, quantity and type of Gd contrast agent
administered. To evaluate different injection
strategies, a physiologic model of bolus delivery from
the antecubital vein to the artery of interest was used
to predict contrast agent concentration vs. time.
Contrast agent relaxivities (T1 and T2*) in oxygenated
whole blood were then used to predict signal intensity
modulation during the CE-MRA acquisition, which
ultimately leads to blurring in CE-MRA. Blurring was
evaluated in image space for varying injections using
modulation transfer function analysis.
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16:12 |
0653.
|
Reducing View-sharing
artifacts in dynamic Contrast-Enhanced Magnetic Resonance
Angiography using Compressed Sensing
Stanislas Rapacchi1, Yutaka Natsuaki2,
Gerhard Laub2, John Paul Finn1,
and Peng Hu1
1Radiology, UCLA, Los Angeles, California,
United States, 2Siemens
Healthcare, Los Angeles, California, United States
In this work, we aim to study the temporal and spatial
blurring effect of view-sharing on dynamic CE-MRA using
phantom and in vivo clinical data and its impact on the
assessment of blood vessels. Furthermore we propose to
reduce artifacts and improve the accuracy of dynamic CE-MRA
by limiting the use of view-sharing and reconstruct
under-sampled k-spaces with compressed sensing enhanced
with parallel imaging.
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16:24 |
0654.
|
Flow-Induced Phase Effects
in Non-Subtractive Fat-Water Separated MRA
Mahdi Salmani Rahimi1, James H Holmes2,
Kang Wang2, Alejandro Roldan3, and
Frank Korosec3,4
1Biomedical Engineering, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States, 2Global
MR Applications and Workflow, GE Heatlhcare, Madison,
WI, United States, 3Radiology,
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United
States, 4Medical
Physics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI,
United States
Dual-echo fat-water separated techniques have been
recently used for MR angiography of the lower
extremities. Bipolar readout gradients regularly used in
multi-echo acquisitions can cause an extra phase shift
in flowing spins that is not typically accounted for in
fat-water signal separation models. This work
investigates the effects of these readout gradients on
the flowing spins using a controlled flow pump and a
stenosis phantom. Results from the phantom experiment
show the degree of stenosis may be overestimated at high
flow velocities due to water inappropriately being
mapped to the fat image when using bipolar readout
gradient acquisitions. Non-bipolar readout gradients are
shown to mitigate these effects.
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16:36 |
0655. |
High Resolution
Non-Gadolinium CEMRA in Renal Failure: Initial Results in
Pediatric Patients at 3.0T
J. Paul Finn1, Sarah N Khan1,
Aarti Luhar1, Theodore Hall1,
Stanislas Rapacchi1, Fei Han1,
Peng Hu1, Yutaka Natsuaki2, and
Isidro Salusky3
1Radiology, UCLA, Los Angeles, California,
United States, 2Siemens
Healthcare, California, United States, 3Nephrology,
UCLA, California, United States
Purpose: We report our initial findings with ferumoxytol
for non-Gd CEMRA at 3.0T in children with renal failure.
Methods: 9 patients aged 6 days to 14 years were studied
on a Siemens TIM Trio system. Multiple CEMRA phases were
acquired up to 30 minutes following injection and
measurements of SNR and CNR in the thoracic aorta and
inferior vena cava (IVC) were recorded at each phase.
Phantom measurements of T1 and T2* relaxivity were made
at 3.0T. Results: The T1 relaxivity was 9.0 mM-1s-1 and
the T2 relaxivity was 90 mM-1s-1. CNR measurements in
patients confirmed that the intravascular signal in the
ferumoxytol group remained high and stable to the last
measurements, up to 35 minutes post injection, whereas
the signal in the control group fell off with time.
Conclusion and Discussion: Initial results with
ferumoxytol are highly encouraging for CEMRA in children
with renal failure.
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16:48 |
0656.
|
High-Resolution Whole-Heart
Contrast-Enhanced Coronary MRA in 5 Minutes with
Self-Navigation and 100% Gating Efficiency
Jianing Pang1,2, Qi Yang3,
Kuncheng Li3, Yi He4, Zhanming Fan4,
Bin Sun5, Fabio S Raman6, Mark A
Ahlman6, David A Bluemke6,7, Jing
An8, Xiaoming Bi9, Daniel S Berman2,
and Debiao Li2,10
1Radiology and Biomedical Engineering,
Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, United States, 2Biomedical
Imaging Research Institiute, Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 3Department
of Radiology, Xuanwu Hospital of Capital Medical
University, Beijing, China, 4Department
of Radiology, Anzhen Hospital of Capital Medical
University, Beijing, China, 5Fujian
Medical University Union hospital, Fuzhou, Fujian,
China, 6Radiology
and Imaging Sciences, National Institutes of Health
Clinical Center, Bethesda, MD, United States, 7Molecular
Biomedical Imaging Laboratory, National Institutes of
Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, Bethesda, MD,
United States, 8MR
Collaborations NE Asia, Siemens Healthcare, Beijing,
China, 9MR
R&D, Siemens Healthcare, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 10Bioengineering,
University of California, Los Angeles, CA, United States
We have developed a 3DPR based contrast-enhanced
coronary MRA technique that delivers good image quality
at (1.0 mm)3 spatial
resolution with scan time of 5 minutes. Further
investigations are warranted on subjective image quality
evaluation, protocol optimization, and tests on patient
population with suspected CAD.
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17:00 |
0657. |
Pulmonary MRA:
Differentiation of pulmonary embolism from Gibbs artifact -
permission withheld
Peter Bannas1,2, Mark L Schiebler1,
Utaroh Motosugi1, Christopher J Francois1,
Scott B Reeder1,3, and Scott K Nagle1,3
1Department of Radiology, University of
Wisconsin, Madison, Madison, WI, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf,
Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany, 3Department
of Medical Physics, University of Wisconsin, Madison,
Madison, WI, United States
The aim of our study was to establish a quantitative and
objective approach to differentiate Gibbs artifact from
true pulmonary emboli, in order to improve the
diagnostic performance of pulmonary MRA for diagnosis of
pulmonary embolism. The percentage of signal loss
between the vessel lumen and the central dropout was
calculated on both first-pass and steady state MRA from
65 signal drops in 28 patients. Gibbs artifacts revealed
a significantly lower signal drop as compared to
pulmonary embolism. ROC analyses suggest an optimum
threshold value of 53% (first-pass) and 42%-signal drop
(steady state) to differentiate between Gibbs artifact
and PE.
|
17:12 |
0658.
|
Highly Accelerated
Free-breathing ECG-Triggered Contrast-Enhanced Pulmonary
Vein Angiography with Isotropic Spatial Resolution
Sébastien Roujol1, Murilo Foppa1,
Tamer A. Basha1, Mehmet Akçakaya1,
Kraig V Kissinger1, Beth Goddu1,
Sophie Berg1, Warren J. Manning1,2,
and Reza Nezafat1
1Department of Medicine, Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center / Harvard Medical School,
Boston, MA, United States, 2Department
of Radiology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center /
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States
Contrast-enhanced pulmonary vein MR-angiography (CE-PV
MRA) is commonly performed before and after pulmonary
vein isolation procedures to assess PV anatomy to detect
potential post-procedural complications such as PV
stenosis. CE-PV MRA is clinically acquired within a
prolonged breath-hold at contrast arrival in the PVs.
This sequence is not ECG triggered and can lead to
motion-induced blurring artifacts and over-estimation of
the PV size. In addition, this sequence requires an
accurate initiation at contrast arrival in the PVs which
may fail in some patients. Therefore, the development of
improved PV-MRA protocol is desirable. In this study, we
sought to investigate the feasibility of a
highly-accelerated ECG-triggered CE-PV MRA with
isotropic spatial resolution using compressed sensing.
|
17:24 |
0659. |
MRI for Visualization of
Coronary Vein Branches Used for Pacemaker Lead Implantation
Adrian Lam1, Luis F Mora-Vieira2,
Michael Lloyd2, and John N Oshinski2
1Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta,
GA, United States, 2Emory
University, GA, United States
In Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy (CRT), the location
of the left ventricular (LV) lead plays an important
role in dictating patient benefit. The LV lead is
delivered through the coronary veins and should be
ideally implanted at the latest contracting site that is
not predominantly myocardial scar. Since the coronary
veins are not imaged until CRT procedure, it is unknown
whether a desired implantation location has coronary
vein access. The objective of this study is to evaluate
the potential of MRI to image the coronary vein branch
used for LV lead implantation with validation against
the gold standard, retrograde x-ray venography.
|
17:36 |
0660. |
Adaptive Steady State
Triggering adds confidence to the Thoracic ECG-Gated
Contrast Enhanced MR Angiography
Yutaka Natsuaki1, J Paul Finn2,
Randall Kroeker3, and Gerhard Laub4
1Siemens Healthcare, Los Angeles, CA, United
States, 2Radiology,
UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 3Siemens
Healthcare, Winnipeg, MB, Canada,4Siemens
Healthcare, San Francisco, CA, United States
AIn thoracic ECG-gated CEMRA, the steady-state
triggering plays a key role in maintaining the
magnetization and minimizing cardiac pulsatile motion.
The current gated CEMRA assumes steady R-R interval with
the fixed scan window (= trigger delay + segment
acquisition). When R-R interval is disrupted due to
heart rate variation and ECG failure, scan time
substantially increases, which causes problems in
timing-sensitive CEMRA scans. The current study
introduces the Adaptive Steady-State Triggering, a novel
prospective trigger adjustment approach to compensate
the early trigger loss and to force the late trigger
scan completion within an acceptable range.
|
17:48 |
0661. |
Using flow models to study
the effects of bolus timing on CE-MRA images
Gabriel Acevedo-Bolton1, Farshid Faraji1,
and David Saloner1,2
1Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, UCSF, San
Francisco, CA, United States, 2VAMC
San Francisco, CA, United States
Image quality in patients undergoing CE-MRA is sensitive
to correct synchronization between imaging initiation
and the contrast bolus. A patient specific flow model
was used to study the effects of scan initiation
relative to contrast injections on 3D CE-MRA images. We
found unless the center of k-space was in after the
contrast upswing poor image quality resulted. With the
high temporal resolution available, we were able to
resolve the transport of contrast into the model. More
importantly, the use of a flow model provides a robust
and repeatable test bed to study timing effects.
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