3170. |
Functional Quantitative
Susceptibility Mapping in Comparison with BOLD and PET
PINAR SENAY ÖZBAY1,2, Cristina Rossi1,
Geoffrey Warnock3, Klaas Paul Prüssmann2,
and Daniel Nanz1
1Institute for Diagnostic and Interventional
Radiology, University Hospital Zürich, Zürich, Zürich,
Switzerland, 2Institute
for Biomedical Engineering, University and ETH Zürich,
Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland, 3University
Hospital Zürich, Clinic of Nuclear Medicine, Zürich,
Zürich, Switzerland
In functional MRI, phase information as complementary
information to BOLD signal-magnitude changes have been
investigated with increasing interest in recent years.
In this study we tested to what degree Quantitative
Susceptibility Maps, derived from EPI-phase data that
were simultaneously acquired with traditional BOLD fMRI
magnitude data, reflect patterns of neuronal activation
as observed with an identical block-design
visual-stimulation paradigm in water PET and BOLD MRI
data. Observations pertinent to data processing and QSM
data are reported.
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3171. |
Quantitative Susceptibility
Mapping: High Resolution Imaging of the Dentate Nucleus at
High Field Strength (7T)
PINAR SENAY ÖZBAY1,2, Michael Wyss2,
Cristina Rossi1, Klaas Paul Prüssmann2,
and Daniel Nanz1
1University Hospital Zürich, Institute for
Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, Zürich, Zürich,
Switzerland, 2Institute
for Biomedical Engineering, University and ETH Zürich,
Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland
In-vivo imaging of deep cerebellar structures and deep
nuclei is difficult even by MRI due to their small size
and limited contrast. In this work we aimed at a
visualization and characterization of the fine
corrugated band that represents the dentate nucleus (DN)
by means of high-resolution Quantitative Susceptibility
Mapping (QSM) at 7T. QSM depicted the DN band with
significantly better contrast than T2*-weighted images
or T2* maps. Quantitative susceptibility differences of
the right and left DN band with respect to frontal white
matter could be measured. QSM-based estimates of right
and left DN band volumes are also reported.
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3172.
|
Field perturbations due to
hollow spheres with anisotropic magnetic susceptibility
Matthew Cronin1, Samuel Wharton1,
Penny Gowland1, and Richard Bowtell1
1Sir Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance
Centre, The University of Nottingham, Nottingham, Notts,
United Kingdom
The magnetic field perturbations produced when simple
structures composed of materials with isotropic magnetic
susceptibility are exposed to magnetic fields have been
well documented, but the effect of material of
anisotropic magnetic susceptibility has been less
explored. Here, we experimentally investigate the field
perturbations produced by spherical shells of pyrolytic
graphite sheet, a material with a highly anisotropic
susceptibility. It is shown that in agreement with
theory, uniform, geometry-dependent field offsets are
produced inside the spheres with minimal external field
perturbation. The results indicate that hollow spheres
with anisotropic susceptibility could form the basis of
useful tunable contrast agents.
|
3173. |
Investigating white matter
microstructural changes during demyelination using GRE phase
and R2*
Way Cherng Chen1,2, Karla Miller2,
and Kai-Hsiang Chuang1
1Singapore Bioimaging Consortium, Singapore,
Singapore, Singapore, 2FMRIB,
University of Oxford, Oxford, Oxon, United Kingdom
The relationship between white matter microstructure and
GRE signal phase and magnitude was investigated using a
cuprizone mouse model of demyelination. Ex vivo R2* and
frequency maps showed high correlations with
histological myelin stain intensity. Geometric WM
modeling suggested that the GRE signal is not only
sensitive to the bulk amount of myelin but also the
spatial distribution of myelin within WM.
|
3174. |
Fourier spectrum tensor
imaging based assessment of neuronal architecture - a
simulation study
Ferdinand Schweser1, Edsel Daniel Peres Gomez1,
Andreas Deistung1, and Jürgen R Reichenbach1
1Medical Physics Group, Institute of
Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology I, Jena
University Hospital - Friedrich Schiller University
Jena, Jena, Germany
In a recent paper Liu and Li presented a novel MR
phase-based technique to assess tissue anisotropy, in
the following referred to as Fourier spectrum Tensor
Imaging (FTI). With this contribution we provide
important insights on the most important parameters of
FTI: the MR imaging resolution, the spatial resolution
of the numerical grid during the post-processing, the
effect of the size of the ROI, and the sensitivity to
measurement noise.
|
3175. |
Effects of NMR invisible
oriented perturbers on signal phase
Matthew Cronin1, Samuel Wharton1,
Anna Blazejewska1, Penny Gowland1,
and Richard Bowtell1
1Sir Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance
Centre, The University of Nottingham, Nottingham, Notts,
United Kingdom
As gradient echo phase images are increasingly being
used in MRI, it is important to understand factors which
contribute to MR signal phase. Here, using numerical
simulations, we investigate the effect of oriented,
spheroidal, NMR-invisible perturbers of varying volume
fraction and shape on the average frequency of the NMR
signal for different diffusion rates. Results indicate
that the frequency is generally dependent on the
perturber shape and does not simply reflect the volume
average susceptibility. The frequency is simply related
to the perturber’s demagnetising factor at short
evolution times and at all times when the rate of
diffusion is high.
|
3176. |
Quantitative signal
analysis in the dipole field of a single vessel
Christian H Ziener1
1Radiology, German Cancer Research Center,
Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Signal formation in the dipole field of a single vessel
is of paramount interest in susceptibility weighted
imaging and functional MRI. Spin dephasing around a
vessel is analyzed with consideration of diffusion
effects which cannot be neglected for small vessels. A
full analytic solution of the Bloch-Torrey equation is
presented without any approximations, thus enabling the
correct interpretation of the susceptibility weighted
signal. With these solutions at hand, SWI and DWI
measurements can be interpreted at the same time, since
the influence of diffusion on magnitude and phase images
is included in this analysis.
|
3177. |
Improving Accuracy of
Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Using Edge-Weighted L1
Regularisation
Meng-Chi Hsieh1,2, Chung-Ming Chen3,
Kun-Hsien Chou4, Ai-Ling Hsu1,2,
Ching-Po Lin4, and Jyh-Horng Chen1,2
1Graduate Institute of Biomedical Electronics
and Bioinformatics, National Taiwan University, Taipei,
Taiwan, 2Interdisciplinary
MRI/MRS Laboratory, Department of Electrical
Engineering, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, 3Institute
of Biomedical Engineering, National Taiwan University,
Taipei, Taiwan, 4Brain
Connectivity Lab, Institute of Neuroscience, National
Yang-Ming University, Taipei, Taiwan
The purpose of this study is to improve accuracy for
quantitative susceptibility map (QSM) by Edge-Weighted
L1 (EW-L1) regularization. Numerical simulation and
human brain experiment were performed to demonstrate the
superiority of EW-L1 over conventional L1 method. Our
results showed that EW-L1 provides highly accurate
estimation and suppressed streaking artefact of QSM.
Preliminary results of brain imaging suggested its
feasibility of QSM in clinical practice.
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3178. |
A concomitant method to
unwrap phase images with fringelines
Wen-Tung Wang1, Ningzhi Li2, Dzung
Pham3, and John Anthony Butman4
11Center for Neuroscience and Regenerative
Medicine, Henry Jackson Foundation, Bethesda, MD, United
States, 2Center
for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine, Henry
Jackson Foundation, MD, United States, 31Center
for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine, Henry
Jackson Foundation, MD, United States, 4Diagnostic
Radiology, National Institute of Health, MD, United
States
A number of phase unwrapping algorithms can faithfully
unwarp wrapped MRI phase images on a voxel-by-voxel
basis. These sequential algorithms cannot unwrap phase
fringelines, which terminate at singular poles. The
method based on Fourier properties and trigonometric
identities of the Laplacian operator can unwrap wrapped
raw phase images with fringelines, but its resultant
images show low-frequency deviation. By combining the
Fourier method with a sequential algorithm by Cusack et
al. using high- and low-pass filtering, the wrapped raw
phase with fringelines can be unwrapped without
low-frequency deviations.
|
3179. |
Quantitative Susceptibility
Mapping with a Combination of Different Regularization
Parameters
Ryota Sato1, Toru Shirai1, Yo
Taniguchi1, Takenori Murase2,
Yoshihisa Soutome1,2, Yoshitaka Bito2,
and Hisaaki Ochi1
1Central Research Laboratory, Hitachi, Ltd.,
Kokubunji, Tokyo, Japan, 2Hitachi
Medical Corporation, Chiba, Japan
To achieve a susceptibility map with high accuracy and
high precision, a method is proposed for QSM with a
combination of different regularization parameters. In
the proposed method, k-space was divided into three
domains and susceptibility maps calculated by different
regularization parameters are applied to each domain. A
numerical simulation based on a COSMOS reconstructed
susceptibility map was used to compare both the accuracy
and the precision of susceptibility maps calculated by
conventional and proposed methods. The results suggest
that the accuracy and the precision of the proposed
method are comparable to or higher than those of the
conventional methods.
|
3180. |
Accuracies of the Laplacian
based phase processing methods
Saifeng Liu1, Sagar Buch1, and E.
Mark Haacke1,2
1School of Biomedical Engineering, McMaster
University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, 2Department
of Radiology, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan,
United States
The Laplacian of phase has been frequently used in
background phase removal in QSM. To calculate the
Laplacian of phase, the wrapped phase differences
together with discrete Laplacian operator can be used,
or the trigonometric functions together with Fourier
transform (continuous Laplacian operator) can be used.
Former studies have shown errors associated with veins
in the phase images processed using continuous Laplacian
operators. In this study, both discrete and continuous
Laplacian operators are evaluated using simulated and in
vivo data, in order to understand the source of the
error associated with veins in the processed phase
images.
|
3181. |
FOREGROUND FIELD REMOVAL
IMPROVES QUANTITATIVE SUSCEPTIBILITY MAPPING
Job G Bouwman1 and
P R Seevinck2
1Image Sciences Institute, University Medical
Center, Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands, 2Image
Sciences Institute, University Medical Center, Utrecht,
Netherlands
Experimental validation of how QSM reconstruction can be
improved by preconditioning the input field, based on a
prior estimate of the underlying susceptibility
distribution. Using prior knowledge, a better
distinction was made between background and foreground
field leading to a more valid dχ-reconstruction.
Moreover, by flattening the input field, less
regularization was needed, leading to sharper results,
less streaking and reduced underestimation.
|
3182. |
Resolution improvement in
Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping by denser sampling of
spatial dipole field
Yuya Umemoto1, Mai Murashima2,3,
Tomohiro Ueno2, and Naozo Sugimoto2
1Faculty of Medicine, Kyoto University,
Kyoto, Kyoto, Japan, 2Graduate
of Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Kyoto, Japan, 3present
address Toshiba Medical Systems Corporation, Otawara,
Tochigi, Japan
In Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping, susceptibility
distribution can be obtained by deconvolving a perturbed
magnetic field with a spatial unit dipole field. The
spatial dipole field has a rapid changing nature. In
this study, we employed a denser sampled dipole field in
the deconvolving process to improve spatial resolution
of QSM. We created Shepp-Logan phantom including partial
volume effects and used as a low resolution input data.
A Fourier-transformed dipole field with high resolution
was created analytically, and a perturbed field was
expanded by the nearest neighbor method. With the
proposed method, a susceptibility map with higher
spatial resolution was obtained.
|
3183. |
Phase image artifact
reduction through interpolation
Saifeng Liu1, Sagar Buch1, and E.
Mark Haacke1
1School of Biomedical Engineering, McMaster
University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
The accuracy of quantitative susceptibility mapping is
dependent on the background phase removal. When regions
with unreliable phase values are included in the phase
image, e.g. vessels without proper flow compensation or
bones with noisy phase, a simple background phase
removal may amplify phase noise or create edge
artifacts. In this study, we show a method to reduce the
phase artifacts that are caused by the inclusion of
noisy regions with unreliable phase values, in order to
improve the accuracy of QSM.
|
3184. |
Phase Contrast at
Ultra-High Field - Establishing the Imaging Workflow
Johannes Lindemeyer1, Michael S. Poole1,
Desmond H. Y. Tse1, Ana-Maria Oros-Peusquens1,
and N. Jon Shah1,2
1INM - 4, Research Centre Jülich GmbH, Jülich,
Germany, 2Department
of Neurology, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany
Gradient echo based phase mapping for susceptibility
reconstructions in the human brain requires careful data
evaluation at ultra-high field. We present a workflow
including recombination of multiple receive channels and
advanced processing methods for obtaining background
corrected field and susceptibility maps. Correction of
the individual receive channels for spatially varying
phase offsets represents an essential processing step.
|
3185. |
Automatic Artifact
Detection and Image Quality Assessment for Quantitative
Susceptibility Mapping
Chun-Kun Wang1, Po-Yu Lin2,
Tzu-Cheng Chao1,2, and Ming-Long Wu1,2
1Institute of Medical Informatics, National
Cheng Kung University, Tainan, Taiwan, 2Department
of Computer Science and Information Engineering,
National Cheng Kung University, Tainan, Taiwan
Quantitative susceptibility mapping has been a useful
tool to monitoring magnetic properties of the tissues.
However streaking artifacts of most QSM reconstruction
hampers the interpretation of the susceptibility maps.
While several reconstruction algorithms were proposed to
alleviate the artifact, an object quantification of
artifact is also important. The presented work aims at
developing an automatic detection of the residual
streaking artifact to facilitate an objective assessment
of quality of QSM reconstructions.
|
3186. |
Fast Calculation of
Susceptibility Weighted Imaging in Arbitrary Slice
Orientation
Ryota Sato1, Toru Shirai1, Yo
Taniguchi1, Takenori Murase2, and
Hisaaki Ochi1
1Hitachi, Ltd., Kokubunji, Tokyo, Japan, 2Hitachi
Medical Corporation, Chiba, Japan
To achieve SWI based on susceptibility maps without
streaking artifacts in short calculation time, a method
was developed for susceptibility-weighted imaging using
a susceptibility map calculated without regularization
in very small iteration number. To evaluate the
usefulness of the proposed method, image contrasts of
axial slices in closed-type MRI and open-type MRI
acquired by the conventional and the proposed method
were compared. The results suggest that the proposed
method can enhance contrast of regions with high
magnetic susceptibility, such as veins or iron
depositions, in arbitrary slice orientation within about
20 seconds without streaking artifacts.
|
3187. |
Complete or partial flow
compensation for improved arterial depiction in multi-echo
susceptibility-weighted imaging
Guillaume Gilbert1,2 and
Laurent Létourneau-Guillon2
1MR Clinical Science, Philips Healthcare,
Montreal, Quebec, Canada, 2Department
of Radiology, Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de
Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
The purpose of this work was to evaluate the use of 3D
multi-echo flow compensation for improved multi-echo
susceptibility-weighted imaging, to extend a concept for
partial flow compensation to multi-echo imaging and to
perform a direct comparison between complete and partial
flow compensation methods. The inclusion of 3D
multi-echo flow compensation is shown to improve
arterial depiction in the combined
susceptibility-weighted images. Partial flow
compensation is shown to provide substantial
improvements while not requiring as much of a compromise
in terms of echo spacing as complete flow compensation.
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3188. |
Repeatability and
reproducibility of brain quantitative susceptibility
mapping.
Kofi Deh1, Sarah Eskreis-Winkler2,
Pascal Spincemaille2, Thanh Nguyen2,
and Yi Wang1,3
1Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY,
United States, 2Weill
Cornell Medical College, New York, United States, 3Department
of Biomedical Engineering, Cornell University, NY,
United States
The amount of variation between quantitative
susceptibility maps (QSM) of the same subject acquired
with different MRI systems has remained an open
question. We investigated this problem by comparing QSM
images acquired at two different sites, one with a
Siemens 3T and the other with a GE 3T scanner. We
obtained high correlation coefficients for QSM images
from the two sites (0.99 for phantoms, 0.97 for humans).
Taken together with our Bland-Altman plots of the data,
which indicated no bias, we conclude that scanner
systems we studied may be used interchangeably.
|
3189. |
Real time changes of phase
contrast of gray matter and white matter between in
vivo and in
situ postmortem
rat brain
Jie Luo1 and
Dmitriy Yablonskiy1
1Radiology, Washington University in St.
Louis, St. Louis, MO, United States
The phase contrasts obtained by gradient echo MRI
provides complimentary information on brain anatomy. One
of the ways to understanding the biophysical origins of
the phase contrast relies on postmortem studies.
However, to what extend and how fast postmortem changes
affect MR tissue properties are not known. In this pilot
study, we have demonstrated for the first time changes
in the gray/white matter phase contrast and R2* during
transition from live to postmortem conditions. Our data
are in agreement with minor role of blood oxygenation
level on gray/white matter phase contrast and major role
on changes in R2* contrast.
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3190.
|
A Monte Carlo method for
overcoming the edge artifacts in MRI-based electrical
conductivity mapping
Li Huang1, Ferdinand Schweser2,
Karl-Heinz Herrmann2, Martin Krämer2,
Andreas Deistung2, and Jürgen Rainer
Reichenbach2
1in-vivo-MR Group, Faculty 02
(Biology/Chemistry), University Bremen, Bremen, Bremen,
Germany, 2Medical
Physics Group, Institute of Diagnostic and
Interventional Radiology I, Jena University Hospital -
Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Jena, Thuringia,
Germany
MRI-based conductivity mapping is a promising new MR
technique with great potential for clinical
applications. Literature algorithms for reconstructing
conductivity maps suffer from edge artifacts near tissue
interfaces, which restrict the reliability of the
conductivity information. To overcome this limitation we
propose a novel Monte Carlo method, which was applied in
a dedicated phantom and in
vivo experiment.
Resulting conductivity maps showed improved SNR with
well delineated anatomic structures, reduced edge
artifacts, and reasonable conductivity values.
|
3191. |
An Inverse Approach to
MR-EPT Reconstruction
Andrea Borsic1, Irina Perreard2,
and Ryan J Halter1
1Thayer School of Engineering, Dartmouth
College, Hanover, NH, United States, 2Radiology
Department, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, United
States
This manuscript presents a novel approach to the
reconstruction of the electrical properties of tissues
from MRI B1 field information. While other approaches
require differentiation of B1 phase or amplitude
information, an inverse problem approach is proposed,
where conductivity / permittivity are estimated by
matching a simulated B1 phase / amplitude to measured
ones. Through this formulation it is possible to reduce
sensitivity to noise typical of differentiation
processes and to deal better with sharp image
transitions.
|
3192. |
Use of Adaptive Diffusion
Filters to Estimate In-Vivo Conductivity Images from B1+
Maps
Eric Michel1, Daniel Hernandez1,
Min Hyoung Cho1, and Soo Yeol Lee1
1Dept. of Biomedical Engineering, Kyung Hee
University, Yongin-Si, Gyeonggi-Do, Korea
Computing electrical conductivity or electrical
permittivity maps from the measured B1 maps is a
noise-amplifying process due to the Laplacian
computation involved in solving the underlying
electromagnetic field equations. We applied adaptive
diffusion filters (ADFs) to denoise the B1 maps prior to
the ordinary Laplacian computation based on the
second-order difference equation on three consecutive
neighboring pixels in each direction. Both in the
simulations and in-vivo conductivity imaging experiments
at 3T, we observed significant improvements in the
conductivity image quality computed from the noisy B1
maps acquired by the double angle method (DAM).
|
3193. |
Reference aided imaging of
rat tumor dielectric properties at 3.0T
Selaka B Bulumulla1, Jeannette C Roberts1,
Seung-Kyun Lee1, Peter Lamb1, and
Ileana Hancu1
1GE Global Research, Niskayuna, NY, United
States
Dielectric contrast of tumors has received significant
interest as a potential means to improve specificity of
cancer imaging. Although dielectric property estimation
from MR transmit field is a promising approach, the
noise inherent in field maps and the reconstruction
algorithm may introduce errors. Therefore, we propose a
reference aided method to validate data sets, and
optimize reconstruction algorithm parameters to improve
the process. The process is demonstrated with two
reference solutions and adenocarcinoma strains grown in
rat models.
|
3194. |
Simultaneous Determination
of Electrical Properties and Proton Density in a Generalized
Gradient-based Electrical Properties Tomography
Jiaen Liu1, Xiaotong Zhang1,
Pierre-Francois Van de Moortele2, Sebastian
Schmitter2, and Bin He1,3
1Biomedical Engineering, University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States, 2Center
for Magnetic Resonance Research, University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States, 3Institute
for Engineering in Medicine, University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Electrical properties tomography (EPT), which utilizes
measurable radiofrequency field (B1) information to
image the electrical properties (EP) of tissue,
including conductivity and permittivity, holds promises
in both clinical diagnosis and real time
subject-specific quantification of specific absorption
rate. In a previous study, we have derived and validated
a gradient-based EPT (gEPT) approach with significantly
improved boundary reconstruction and fidelity against
measurement noise. Here, a more generalized method for
gEPT is introduced to quantitatively solve gEPT under
the practical situation when proton density is unknown.
As a result, both EP and proton density can be obtained
with satisfactory boundary reconstruction.
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