| Literature DB >> 10398952 |
R F Busse1, D G Kruger, J P Debbins, S B Fain, S J Riederer.
Abstract
A method to tailor the view order to the reconstruction cycle is introduced for real-time MRI. It is well known that view sharing and oversampling central k-space views can improve the temporal resolution of gradient-echo pulse sequences. By ordering phase-encodes to synchronize k-space acquisition with the reconstruction cycle, apparent temporal resolution can match the frame rate with as few as one-fourth of the phase-encodes sampled per reconstruction. Spatial resolution is maintained by periodically updating high spatial frequencies. In addition to apparent temporal resolution, three other criteria for real-time imaging are identified and evaluated: display latency, dispersion, and frame-to-frame consistency. Latency is minimized by ordering views in a reverse-centric manner within each reconstruction interval, sampling high-energy views immediately prior to beginning reconstruction. Dispersion is kept low and consistent by synchronizing acquisition and reconstruction, thus avoiding poorly timed reconstruction instances. Real-time implementation demonstrates pulsatile time-of-flight blood signal enhancement in humans.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1999 PMID: 10398952 DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1522-2594(199907)42:1<69::aid-mrm11>3.0.co;2-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Magn Reson Med ISSN: 0740-3194 Impact factor: 4.668