16:00 |
0882. |
Prospective head motion
correction in 3D FLASH using EPI-based volumetric navigators
(vNavs)
M. Dylan Tisdall1,2, Himanshu Bhat3,
Keith Heberlein3, and André J. W. van der
Kouwe1,2
1A. A. Martinos Center for Biomedical
Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown,
Massachusetts, United States, 2Radiology,
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United
States, 3Siemens
Medical Solutions USA Inc., Charlestown, Massachusetts,
United States
We demonstrate the use of EPI-based volumetric
navigators (vNavs) in 3D FLASH for prospective
correction of head motion. Unlike in previous works with
vNavs, where the navigator was inserted into dead time
(e.g., TR or TI fill), in vNav FLASH we use the same
pulse and TR for both vNavs and the FLASH TRs, allowing
us to alternate between them without disturbing the
magnetization steady state. We demonstrate the use of
this sequence to perform prospective motion correction
in a volunteer.
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16:12 |
0883.
|
Motion Correction of EPI
sequences using their intrinsic high-frequency content
Maximilian Haeberlin1, Alexander Aranovitch1,2,
Lars Kasper1, Christoph Barmet1,
and Klaas Paul Pruessmann1
1Institute for Biomedical Engineering,
University and ETH, Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, 2Department
of Physics, Technische Universität München, Bavaria,
Germany
Neuro applications such as fMRI, DWI or PWE imaging that
use EPI readouts for image encoding often suffer from
rigid body motion of the head. We present a method that
uses the high frequency content of the EPI trajectory to
track the positions of a field probe array attached to
the head that is robust against field fluctuations and
is combined with concurrent field monitoring in the head
frame of reference. We report a localization precision
of 12 micrometers and show successful continuous slice
tracking during a 3-minute EPI acquisiton well suited
for fMRI.
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16:24 |
0884. |
The Impact of Dixon
Water-Fat Separation on Motion Correction in PROPELLER MRI
Michael Schär1,2, Holger Eggers3,
Nicholas R Zwart2, Yuchou Chang2,
Akshay Bakhru4, and James G Pipe2
1Philips Healthcare, Cleveland, OH, United
States, 2Neuroimaging
Research, Barrow Neurological Institute, Phoenix, AZ,
United States, 3Philips
Research, Hamburg, HH, Germany, 4Philips
Healthcare, Bangalore, Karnataka, India
The readout direction in PROPELLER MRI is rotated over
180°. The water-fat shift may blur fat, or the motion
correction may try to remove the fat blurring at the
expense of water sharpness. Here we propose to use Dixon
water-fat separation per blade to reconstruct either
water only images, or to combine water with fat shifted
back to its original position for each blade before
running the PROPELLER motion correction algorithm. This
work shows that the proposed method improves shift
estimation, reduces blurring in images acquired with and
without bulk motion, and allows water and fat separated
PROPELLER MRI.
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16:36 |
0885. |
Will field shifts due to
head rotation compromise motion correction?
Aleksandra Sulikowska1, Samuel Wharton1,
Paul M Glover1, and Penny A Gowland1
1Sir Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance
Centre, University of Nottingham, Nottingham,
Nottinghamshire, United Kingdom
We have characterised the size and locations of the
maximum B0 field shifts within the brain at 7T for head
pitch and roll angles in order to determine how these
may be accounted for in motion correction. B0 difference
maps of the brain were acquired from 5 healthy
volunteers, each being imaged at 4 different head
orientations. Eight small VOIs located at the positions
of the largest observed field changes were analysed for
each subject. The B0 field difference maps are spatially
similar across all subjects and the magnitude of shift
shows a linear dependence on the angle of both pitch and
roll. The maximum frequency shift occurs in the frontal
lobe during pitch where the sensitivity is -1.32±0.02
Hz/degree.
|
16:48 |
0886.
|
Comparison of Non-rigid
Motion Compensated Reconstructions for 3D Abdominal MRI
Gastao Cruz1, David Atkinson2,
Christoph Kolbitsch1, Tobias Schaeffter1,
and Claudia Prieto1
1Division of Imaging Sciences & Biomedical
Engineering, King's College London, London, United
Kingdom, 2Centre
for Medical Imaging, University College London, London,
United Kingdom
We propose a motion compensation framework for 3D
free-breathing abdominal MRI. This approach uses a
general matrix description that incorporates motion
compensation directly into the reconstruction process.
The proposed method is compared with a recently
introduced motion compensation technique based on image
warping and the conventional gated approach. Results
show the proposed approach produces images sharper than
the image warping approach and gated reconstruction.
|
17:00 |
0887. |
Motion correction in
post-injection dynamic cardiac T1-mapping:
preliminary results
Anne Menini1,2, Pauline Ferry3,
Marine Beaumont4,5, Jeffrey A. Stainsby6,
Glenn S. Slavin7, Laurent Bonnemains5,
Jacques Felblinger1,4, and Freddy Odille3
1IADI, Université de Lorraine, Nancy, France, 2Global
Research, GE, Garching b. München, Germany, 3U947,
INSERM, Nancy, France, 4CIC,
INSERM, Nancy, France, 5CHU
Nancy, Nancy, France, 6Healthcare,
GE, Toronto, ON, Canada, 7Healthcare,
GE, Bethesda, MD, United States
Dynamic quantification of myocardial T1 pre-
and post-injection is a useful tool to evaluate
fibrosis. These quantifications require numerous
acquisitions and are therefore very sensible to inter-
and intra-acquisition motion, especially in patients who
can barely hold their breath. Here, we propose a motion
compensation method that can be applied on
multi-contrast acquisitions by taking advantage of
redundant information. This motion correction was
applied on data sets acquired in free-breathing in two
patients with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy. The proposed
method was shown to improve the differentiation between
regions of the myocardium with different stages of
fibrosis.
|
17:12 |
0888. |
Non-Cartesian Retrospective
Reconstruction of Cardiac Motion in Patients with Severe
Arrhythmia
Francisco Contijoch1, Yuchi Han1,
Michael Schacht Hansen2, James J Pilla1,
Joseph H Gorman1, Robert C Gorman1,
and Walter RT Witschey1
1University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
PA, United States, 2NHLBI,
NIH, Bethesda, MD, United States
Although cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
is the gold standard for assessment of cardiac function,
image quality is compromised in patients with ectopy. We
sought to understand how ECG-gated retrospective
reconstruction fails despite arrhythmia rejection before
developing a retrospective reconstruction method using
cardiac self-gating on low spatial resolution images are
obtained from golden angle radial MRI data. Myocardial
systolic and diastolic motion was inferred from
segmented ventricular volumes and golden angle
projections were retrospectively reconstructed to obtain
high quality images. The effectiveness of the method was
evaluated in 2 patients with severe ventricular
arrhythmia.
|
17:24 |
0889.
|
3T Coronary MRA with 100%
Navigator Efficiency with 3D Self Navigation
Jonathan Powell1, Markus Henningsson1,
Claudia Prieto1,2, Peter Koken3,
and Rene Botnar1
1Division of Biomedical Engineering and
Imaging Sciences, King's College London, London, London,
United Kingdom, 2Escuela
de Ingeniería, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile,
Santiago, Chile, 3Philips
Research, Hamburg, Germany
We use a novel 3D beat-to-beat cardiac navigator to
retrospectively correct 3D CMRA datasets. As a result we
achieve an effective 100% navigator efficiency with
equivalent image quality compared to 8mm gated CMRA
scans.
|
17:36 |
0890. |
Simultaneous monitoring of
cardiac and respiratory signals using a markerless optical
system
Julian Maclaren1, Murat Aksoy1,
Jakob Ehrl1, Manojkumar Saranathan1,
and Roland Bammer1
1Dept. of Radiology, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, United States
Due to the advent of optical prospective motion
correction techniques, it is becoming increasingly
common to place MR-compatible video cameras inside the
scanner bore during imaging. In this work, we show that
video data of the skin can be used to obtain both
cardiac and respiratory signals from the subject without
requiring a marker or any other form of physical
contact.
|
17:48 |
0891. |
Optical Motion Tracking
With Two Markers for Robust Prospective Motion Correction
Aditya Singh1, Benjamin Zahneisen1,
Brian Keating1, Michael Herbst2,
Maxim Zaitsev2, and Thomas Ernst1
1JABSOM, University of Hawaii, Honolulu,
Hawaii, United States, 2University
Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
Prospective motion correction (PMC) using camera-based
tracking of a skin-attached marker may suffer from
problems such as loss of marker visibility and false
tracking signals due to squinting or twitching. We
introduce a PMC system that is capable of mitigating
these problems by simultaneously tracking two markers
placed on the object to be imaged. Experiments
demonstrate improved image quality during obstruction of
the line-of-sight and when a subject squints. The
techniques developed can be applied to any optical
tracking system and can be adapted to the use of more
than two markers.
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